Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The history of universities in Scotland includes the development of all universities and university colleges in Scotland, between their foundation between the fifteenth century and the present day. Until the fifteenth century, those Scots who wished to attend university had to travel to England, or to the Continent.
The Scottish Universities Summer School in Physics (SUSSP) was established in 1960 by the four ancient Scottish Universities (Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow and St. Andrews) to contribute to the dissemination of advanced knowledge in physics and the formation of contacts among scientists from different countries through the setting up of a series ...
The University of Edinburgh was taken out of the care of the city and established on a similar basis to the other ancient universities. [11] After the Robbins Report of 1963 there was a rapid expansion in higher education in Scotland. [12] [13] By the end of the decade the number of Scottish Universities had doubled. [14]
The ancient universities of Scotland (Scottish Gaelic: Oilthighean ann an Alba) [1] are medieval and renaissance universities that continue to exist in the present day. . Together, the four universities are the oldest universities in continuous operation in the English-speaking world after the universities of Oxford and C
The history of education in Scotland in its modern sense of organised and institutional learning, began in the Middle Ages, when Church choir schools and grammar schools began educating boys. By the end of the 15th century schools were also being organised for girls and universities were founded at St Andrews, Glasgow and Aberdeen.
The ancient university governance structure in Scotland is the organisational system imposed by a series of Acts of Parliament called the Universities (Scotland) Acts 1858 to 1966. The Acts applied to what were termed the 'older universities': the University of St Andrews , the University of Glasgow , the University of Aberdeen and the ...
The University of St Andrews, in common with continental universities at the time of its founding, was divided into nations each presided over by a Procurator.The four nations were originally "Albany," "Angus," "Lothian" and "Britain" covering approximately northwest, northeast, southeast and southwest Scotland respectively.
Scotland portal; This category contains the four ancient universities of Scotland that were founded in the Middle Ages, or, in the case of Edinburgh, the early modern period. . It should be noted that Aberdeen was formerly two universities, and that Dundee was formerly part of St Andr