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Pathways to Law is a programme developed by the Sutton Trust and the College of Law (now the Legal Education Foundation), to widen access to the legal profession. [28] It was established in 2006 and is delivered by twelve universities, in collaboration with ten partnering organisations from the legal profession.
In 2006, the college was granted degree-awarding powers and began a collaboration with the Sutton Trust to fund the trust's Pathways to Law program which encourages and supports disadvantaged secondary school students who wish to study law. [4] Until 2012, the College of Law was in the top 100 of UK charities ranked by expenditure. [5]
In 1983, Lampl set up the Sutton Company, a private equity firm with offices in New York City, London and Munich, and by the mid-1990s had become extremely wealthy. [6] Before setting up the Sutton Trust, he funded a campaign to ban handguns [ 7 ] in the wake of the Dunblane massacre which resulted in a complete ban on handguns in the UK.
A research report commissioned by NAFSA identified INTO University Partnerships as one of the eight third-party providers offering pathway programmes for international students in the United States. [3] In May 2018, it was reported that owner and founder Colin was seeking a buyer for his INTO University Partnerships.
The Pathways Programs are a series of programs of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management geared toward inviting talented students and recent graduates into federal employment. The programs were instituted as a result of an executive order signed in 2010, which incorporated both preexisting and new programs.
As of the 1920s, it was known as the Sutton and Cheam School of Art [2] and in the 1950s as Sutton and Cheam School of Art and Crafts. [3] A core group of full-time and part-time staff from the School of Art moved to the new Sutton College in 1972. The first Principal of Sutton College was Peter Batten. [4]
Sutton School is a coeducational foundation special school, located in the Russells Hall Estate in Dudley, West Midlands, England. [1] It provides education to pupils aged 11 to 16 years and caters for approximately 160 pupils. Pupils at the school have a Statement of Special Educational Needs, and are deemed to have moderate learning ...
It was opened on 18 September 1929 as Sutton Coldfield High School. Plans for a school had begun in 1906 with sites behind Sutton Coldfield Town Hall, in Sutton Park and Rectory Park all being considered before a 6-acre (2.4 ha) field behind Beeches Walk was selected. It became Sutton Coldfield Girls School in 1962 and then changed its name to ...