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Damelin Correspondence College is a private correspondence college in South Africa, owned by Educor (The Education Investment Corporation Limited group). [3] It was founded in 1955 by Johann Brumer, a teacher who started his career at Damelin and started developing long distance study materials.
[8] [7] [10] [2] [3] [4] Damelin offers degrees, diplomas and other higher qualifications, but is considered a college instead of a university due to the regulations for tertiary institutions in South Africa. [11] Damelin is the oldest and most profitable education subsidiary owned by Educor. [3]
Damelin Randburg Entrance. Educor is a supplier of private tertiary education in South Africa. Not all of their colleges are accredited. Educor is an abbreviation for the Education Investment Corporation Limited.
Eduvos that is formerly Pearson Institute of Higher Education and Midrand Graduate Institute and Computer Training Institute (CTI) is a South African private higher education institution that is headquartered in Midrand, Gauteng Province and that has 12 campuses across South Africa. [1]
In this list, colleges and universities are defined as accredited, degree-granting, tertiary institutions. As of September 2022, only South African public degree-granting institutions may call themselves a " university ", whereas other accredited private for-profit or not-for-profit degree-granting institutions tend to call themselves colleges ...
The IMM Graduate School is the only CIM accredited institution in South Africa. [10] The Chartered Institute of Marketing (CIM) was founded in 1911. It has over 30,000 members, including more than 3,000 registered Chartered Marketers. [11] CIM offers 130 study centres in 36 countries, and exam centres in 132 countries. [12]
A 2010 Centre for Higher Education Transformation report identified three university clusters in South Africa, grouped according to function. The input variables used to group universities were: Percentage of headcount enrolment in science, engineering and technology; Masters and doctoral enrolments; Student-to-staff ratios
Founded in 1949, the University of Pretoria's now defunct Graduate School of Management was the first business school in South Africa and was the first MBA programme to be launched outside of North America, [1] [2] whilst the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business and University of Stellenbosch Business School, founded in 1964, are ...