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North London Collegiate School (NLCS) is a private day school for girls in England. Founded in Camden Town , it is now located in Edgware , in the London Borough of Harrow . Associate schools are located in South Korea , Jeju Island , Dubai , Vietnam , and Singapore , all of which are coeducational day and boarding schools offering the British ...
Former pupils of North London Collegiate School. Pages in category "People educated at North London Collegiate School" The following 83 pages are in this category, out of 83 total.
The educational values that Frances Mary Buss taught at the North London Collegiate School became the model for many schools throughout the UK and overseas. This included Bournemouth's Talbot Heath School started by Mary Broad [10] and Pretoria High School for Girls, founded in South Africa by Edith Aitken, a former pupil of Miss Buss. [11]
She then taught at Burlington School for Girls, London before taking a position as headmistress of King's Norton Grammar School, Birmingham in 1939. In 1944, she became head of the North London Collegiate School until retirement in 1965. [1] As headmistress she became a noted figure in the educational world.
Rose Stern (17 November 1869 – October 1953) was a teacher from Birmingham, England.She was science mistress at North London Collegiate School for Ladies. [1] While a student at Mason College, she was the first woman student to become a member of the Institute of Chemistry of Great Britain & Ireland (later the Royal Institute of Chemistry).
Pages in category "Headmistresses of North London Collegiate School" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The family attended a Welsh-language chapel in London. [3] She attended Frances Buss's North London Collegiate School before she was at Newnham College, Cambridge for a year. She returned to work for Frances Buss as a teacher but in her spare time she was campaigning among the Welsh community in London. [1]
MacDonald was head girl at the North London Collegiate School. She then studied Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at Somerville College, Oxford where she won a hockey blue and graduated with a 2:1. She reportedly hoped, at one time, to enter politics. [2] In 1924, her widowed father had become Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.