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Pages in category "Girls' schools in Northern Ireland" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
This is a list of current further education colleges in Northern Ireland, most of which provide both further education and higher education qualifications. [1]Further education colleges offer courses for people over the age of 14, involving school-level qualifications such as Higher Grade exams, as well as work-based learning and apprenticeships. [2]
The lists of schools in Northern Ireland are divided into several articles: List of primary schools in Northern Ireland; List of secondary schools in Northern Ireland; List of grammar schools in Northern Ireland; List of integrated schools in Northern Ireland
Union Theological College, the training institution for the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, which also allows the wider public to study theology at undergraduate and postgraduate level Whitefield College of the Bible , Banbridge is an independent theological college operated by the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster
Victoria College, Belfast is a voluntary non-denominational independent grammar school in Cranmore Park, Belfast, Northern Ireland. In 2022, the college's stated enrolment was 870. [1] Victoria College was awarded specialist school status in science in September 2009.
The origins of the College can be traced back to 1900 when the Dominican Sisters opened St Mary’s Training College on the present Falls Road campus with an enrollment of 100 women students. For nearly 50 years after that, the college was concerned with the education of women students and their preparation for teaching in primary schools.
This is a list of secondary schools and grammar schools in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The type, sector and Department of Education NI reference number is included alongside. Secondary and grammar schools in Belfast [ 1 ]
The Education Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 introduced a school system which included a government-run eleven-plus post-primary transfer test as an entrance exam for grammar schools; this had previously been introduced in England and Wales in 1944. The test, a form of academic selection, was retained in Northern Ireland whereas England and Wales ...