Sydney College of Advanced Education

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The Sydney College of Advanced Education was a tertiary education institution in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It existed from 1982 to 1989.[1]

The Sydney College of Advanced Education commenced operation on 1 January 1982 as part of a round of government-forced amalgamations of Colleges of Advanced Education, amalgamating five previous institutions: Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education, the Guild Teachers' College, the Nursery School Teachers' College, Sydney Kindergarten Teachers' College and Sydney Teachers' College. It was divided into five institutes at its inception: the Sydney Institute of Education (based at the former Sydney Teachers' College campuses at Camperdown and Newtown), the Institute of Early Childhood Studies (with campuses at Newtown and Waverley), the St George Institute of Education (incorporating the former Alexander Mackie College campus at Oatley), the City Art Institute (with campuses in The Rocks, Paddington and Surry Hills), and the Institute of Technical and Adult Teacher Education (based at Ultimo).[1][2][3] It also had an additional centre for students who wished to teach in non-government schools, The Guild Centre.[4]

The college offered undergraduate and postgraduate degrees and diploma courses in visual arts and various specialties of education.[4] A college council was formed with prominent engineer Harold White as chairperson and Margaret Whitlam as deputy chairperson, with Whitlam succeeding White as chairperson in 1982.[5][6] It also had a student representative council, the Sydney College of Advanced Education SRC.[7] The college began with an estimated student population of over 4,300 students, which rose to 6,000 by late 1982.[8][6] The amalgamated college faced immediate issues: the state government had promised that all staff from the five predecessor institutions would be retained at the new college, while the federal government had expected instant savings to be made, resulting in an instant budget shortfall of an estimated $500,000.[8]

Mid-1980s and City Art Institute separation

Disestablishment

References

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