There were protests and sit-downs in the universities and colleges of Dublin, Belfast and Waterford. |
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Students turn to community colleges for basic skills brush-up or new skills acquisition. |
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The Prince then unveiled a plaque at the college, and via a weblink, revealed the plaques at the other two colleges. |
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Trade apprentices are charged the fee for the two 10-week periods they spend as part of their training at the colleges. |
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He said government departments had bursary schemes in technikons and technical colleges to provide learners with financial assistance. |
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We are happy to move over and make room on this list for other colleges and universities as we all work toward bridging the digital divide. |
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At some point, colleges are expected to use the evolving and dynamic MOOC market to make money. |
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Leading up to the season, the team has played a number of short scrimmages against local colleges. |
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Besides inaugurating youth clubs in schools, colleges and villages for the advancement of the rural youth, marriage guidance will also be given. |
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These two board members will be appointed annually no later than October 1 by the above-named colleges. |
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This guide contains information on about 3000 courses offered by universities, technikons, private and technical colleges in South Africa. |
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After July 10, the process of admission in accordance with merit was initiated in the colleges. |
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In some aspects, colleges of agriculture are beginning to look more like colleges of liberal arts and sciences. |
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Choosing among programs can be quite bewildering for the rising high school junior or senior researching colleges and universities. |
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And besides, this rule wasn't made clear to the students in most of the colleges. |
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Social behaviour, table manners and etiquette are being taught by teachers from catering colleges in the city. |
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We can't afford to send her to the polytechnic or the junior colleges here. |
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There should be a smooth transition from community or junior colleges through course articulation. |
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I think it's encouraging that we're seeing more junior colleges teaching entrepreneurship. |
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I have taught courses in mathematics and computer science at various universities ranging from Stanford to junior colleges. |
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In China these institutions are known as workers colleges, junior colleges, and two-year vocational universities. |
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In reversing that decision, the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the law applied only to colleges, not to junior high schools. |
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In a similar vein, Nora recommends that community colleges advance into the twenty-first century prepared for a diverse student body. |
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Unfortunately, some colleges seem more concerned with their own rankings than with fairly ranking applicants. |
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In the past, colleges of agriculture placed a low priority on agricultural economics. |
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The university has trained about 1,500 teachers belonging to its affiliated colleges. |
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Good colleges, scholarships, white-collar jobs, a nice homemaker wife, and two kids were already tangible in his future. |
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This record reflects the nationwide grades, based on affordability of state colleges and universities in a study just released. |
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Community colleges offering two-year programs in liberal education and occupational training meet both of these criteria. |
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Great variation exists in the ways community colleges have responded to the rising immigrant student population on their campuses. |
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This is the second year a portion of the annual funding has been allocated to colleges and universities based on key performance indicators. |
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The training they need is only provided by privately run colleges, mainly in Britain and Europe. |
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For some mysterious reason the history of the Khazar kingdom is conspicuous by its absence from history courses in the schools and colleges. |
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Some colleges are building residence halls with an emphasis on private, single rooms. |
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The Department clearly recognised and accepted the difficulties that aspirant university colleges would face. |
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Chanting anti-government songs, students from the universities and colleges made bonfires at different points on the road. |
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He can volunteer his services for road safety campaigns in schools and colleges. |
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Why, then, have universities and colleges, with a few exceptions, consistently underspent? |
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The price reductions benefit colleges, which receive volume discounts from resellers. |
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Today's colleges and universities also are drawing many more students who arrive on campus with diagnosed mental illnesses. |
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We will work with and fight alongside people in their communities, workplaces and colleges. |
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Hold stalls to sell tickets for the march outside shops, workplaces and colleges. |
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In the process of designing courses and curriculums I re-examined how colleges do it. |
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They are to send a joint letter to all schools and colleges this week explaining the situation. |
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Leaving the architectural taste of other colleges to one side, the front quad is one of the great Oxford vistas. |
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There are five lunchtime catwalk shows, showcasing new designers, colleges and alternative fashion labels. |
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In all, 250 students from 25 colleges made it to the finals of various events organised as part of the festival. |
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There are students in private colleges and techs and they're getting an education. |
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Since then we've done all-star performances in London with sixty-five colleges. |
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Then we reinvented them and called them city technology colleges then relabelled the bottle and called them city academies. |
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That is equivalent to the admission requirements of some Oxford and Cambridge colleges. |
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This had been set up by left wing activists as an alternative to the mainstream, segregated colleges. |
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Many colleges, including my current institution, require an intensive service project for completion of the baccalaureate degree. |
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In the smaller land grant colleges, graduate education becomes less important relative to undergraduate education. |
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By the beginning of the nineteenth century this logic was clear in the common school movement and later, in the land grant colleges. |
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That is why younger, leaner, more ambitious colleges are now the real powerhouses of learning. |
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After the voting age was lowered to 18 in 1971, it seemed anachronistic for colleges to treat their students as wards. |
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The United States has 130 training programmes in universities, medical schools, teaching hospitals, colleges, and the armed forces. |
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We have left them to the mercy of extremist groups who have preyed on them at colleges and universities. |
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It was in that sense comparable to the boards of museums, colleges, and philanthropic organizations. |
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The success of Bradford College in the national league table of teacher training colleges is very encouraging. |
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Bradford College has produced its best-ever showing in a national league table of teacher-training colleges. |
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Hilder taught at Goldsmiths' from 1929 to 1941 and also lectured at other colleges. |
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Teachers at schools and colleges in Rawalpindi attended work wearing black armbands and organised rallies and marches inside their institutions. |
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Presently colleges do not hold their annual athletic meets, once a regular feature of their extracurricular activities. |
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The major points being made by the analogy are that colleges can estimate costs and set tuitions, fees, and requests accordingly. |
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She has taught writing in colleges across the country, and has continued to publish poetry in magazines and anthologies. |
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Financially, colleges responded to revenue shortfalls by laying off workers and downsizing operations. |
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Thus early monasteries may be associated with cathedrals, colleges, and minsters. |
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Even taxpayers who have no school-age children but must pay for public schools and colleges would welcome such tax relief. |
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The report covers the changing design and management of undergraduate majors in colleges of agriculture. |
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All four colleges provided training for secondary school teachers on integrated academic curricula. |
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There are colleges and schools located in religiously affiliated universities and those in secular institutions. |
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Many successful people who couldn't afford Ivy League schools graduated from city and state colleges. |
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Unfortunately the royal colleges do not have a mechanism to assess the standards of unaccredited cosmetic surgeons who are currently practising. |
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Community colleges enroll almost one half of all undergraduates in the United States each fall. |
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He triumphantly announced that he had full-scholarship offers from several colleges. |
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But will such programs merely push tuitions higher rather than reduce the net cost of colleges? |
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To set the ball rolling, a good 100 leading film schools, media colleges and private training institutes were mailshotted to submit entries. |
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And students and their tutors from schools, colleges and training companies from all across Wiltshire will be honoured. |
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During the 1980s and 1990s, many Moroccans entered the United States to attend colleges, universities, graduate schools, and medical schools. |
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Have you heard of any good dance programs in California colleges that incorporate tap? |
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All of the New Orleans universities' semesters are cancelled, so those students are trying to enroll in colleges up here as well. |
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Readers outside Ireland mightn't know that vast majority of students here are educated in state funded schools and colleges. |
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Community sources such as non-profit agencies, service clubs, and local colleges and universities provide many free community services. |
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Clinical toxicology is a topic instructed at some level in most colleges of pharmacy. |
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The contaminated cotton wadding was not found in quilts used in local colleges and nursing homes for the elderly. |
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With only three weeks until the academic year begins, some teacher training colleges are less than half full. |
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They are taught in schools and colleges, and through the mass media, such as newspapers and television. |
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Some colleges even provide faculty with living quarters in the residence halls. |
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Advisory committees help colleges and universities stay in phase with industry needs. |
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The first step into further education can be access courses at local colleges where they will sample work including bricklaying and horticulture. |
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It is time both parents and ambitious students thought of giving a snub to all those avaricious private medical and engineering colleges. |
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You arrived confused, anxious to quench your curiosity at one of South Eastern Connecticut's top liberal arts colleges. |
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He finds himself at various functions, meetings, ceremonies and openings, at a plethora of venues such as hospitals, colleges, sports centres and theatres. |
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Once upon a time, colleges served boiled veggies and mystery meat, assembly-line style. |
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I know of at least two teachers colleges where that has happened. |
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Certainly, these little microcosms of society that are our colleges should model, as closely as possible, what is best about our diverse, democratic, and pragmatic society. |
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In sustaining living communities, collections of buildings such as colleges and campuses, as microcosms of the city typology, always need to grow. |
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Teacher-training colleges, two-year advanced teachers colleges, and university education departments should be partners in planning and implementation. |
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Many meritorious students who have got admissions in self-financing colleges are not in a position to continue their education by paying unexpectedly huge amount as fees. |
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Private schools dominate the top end of the A-level tables while further education and sixth-form colleges account for most of the worst performers. |
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And after May 1, colleges turn to the waitlist, a number most colleges keep top secret. |
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Why would colleges value something as simple as a thank-you note so strongly? |
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A teacher of large and varied attainments was procured, and pupils instructed by him have passed into private colleges, where they have signalised themselves most creditably. |
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Because bacterial meningitis is most likely to occur in confined settings such as college dorms, some colleges ask that incoming students be vaccinated against meningococcus. |
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Are test-optional colleges adopting a kindler, gentler approach to admissions? |
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Students, staff, and faculty of the schools and colleges of the have been shut out of learning and conducting research by the oppressive military siege. |
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They are self-perpetuating power centers of our colleges and universities. |
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So various devices have been evolved for dealing with the overflows, a favourite of which has been to build lodgings on meadowland owned by the colleges next to the Cam. |
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From the start, the universities were modeled after metropolitan examples and typically started off as colleges or affiliates of metropolitan institutions. |
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John Leo is editor of minding the Campus, the Manhattan Institute site on colleges and universities. |
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If not, what anchoring ideologies define teaching in community colleges? |
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Senior colleges and universities do not offer bachelor's degrees in specialized vocational fields or do not choose to allocate resources for such degrees. |
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This may include more links between secondaries and colleges. |
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Thus, a state's master plan for public higher education typically supports two-year colleges as the initial step in may students' pathways to the baccalaureate. |
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Only the private liberal arts colleges seemed to lag noticeably, but they still reported an average of 17 percent more majors in their departments. |
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Due to overcrowding, many colleges are even encouraging the practice, giving tuition break incentives to students willing to defer matriculation for a year. |
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A binary system developed, which distinguished universities, given a strong research responsibility, from institutes of technology and colleges of advanced education. |
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Millions of grads are saddled with unpayable student loans, yet colleges still say they're a sound investment. |
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The magnitude of such events being celebrated at this venue by the district administration becomes high with the participation of numerous schools and colleges. |
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They rarely acknowledge that the option of attending a full-time residential college is not available to the vast majority of people matriculating in community colleges. |
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After getting the heave-ho from one too many colleges, he wrote a letter that was published in the New York Times. |
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Having taught in TAFEs, community colleges and universities and enjoyed all three, I don't see the distinction between training and educating as amounting to much. |
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Today, few colleges baldly award honorary degrees to benefactors. |
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Why not start more coaching colleges for aspirant engineers and doctors! |
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Teenagers flocked to the borough's secondary schools and colleges to discover if they had achieved the A and AS level grades they need for university or college courses. |
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However, the minister was at pains to stress the need for greater co-operation between third-level colleges if the fourth tier is to become a success. |
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Respondents' ratings were viewed as a reflection of the degree to which their colleges of agriculture had shifted from a teaching paradigm to a learning paradigm. |
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Elections were indirect, and membership of electoral colleges at arrondissement level required a minimum of 150 francs a year income from property or real estate. |
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Amherst College, one of the most prestigious and selective colleges in the country, ended interviews almost 20 years ago. |
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Essentially, the colleges retained for the next biennium the state aid they had in the current biennium, a condition that did not exist under the old formula. |
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Government ownership, operation, regulation, and subsidy of schools and colleges should be ended. |
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The atmosphere on campuses has gotten repressive enough that comedian Chris Rock no longer plays colleges. |
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During the mid 1800s, many colleges purchased their own barges, often from London livery companies, which they used as club rooms and moored alongside Christ Church meadow. |
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Newspaper editorials called on colleges and high schools to banish football outright. |
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Further, the two colleges selected may not even be representative of large campuses, fox said. |
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There is a tradition in this country stretching back to Thomas Jefferson of lofty ideals for our colleges and universities. |
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She acknowledges that the classic transition for presidents of liberal arts colleges is to move up to the next rung on the presidential ladder by running a university. |
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As the route to paid employment, universities remain first choice, technikons second, and colleges for further education and training a poor third. |
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Video link-ups from the main colleges nationally would keep a lot of players around and make a huge difference, industrially and socially, to all areas of the county. |
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They have unilaterally removed class size limits at colleges. |
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He has worked extensively with both singers and piano accompanists at many colleges throughout the United States and performed as collaborative pianist nationwide and abroad. |
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The film, which gives young travellers safety tips before jetting off for adventures, is being made available to sixth-form colleges across the country. |
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Most evangelical colleges teach evolution, albeit quietly, carefully, and often tentatively, although there are exceptions. |
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There was also deep anger at reports that colleges might be privatised. |
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Special requests were sent to technology centres in various universities and colleges to allow us to place a banner on their Web site and to invite student participation. |
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Art is confined to art colleges, with life drawing virtually redundant. |
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The campaign will start in elementary schools next week and then be extended to high schools and junior colleges, the ministry said in a statement. |
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It has control of the development and administration of the Government and Government-aided primary schools, secondary schools, and junior colleges. |
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At community colleges across the nation, faculty members are still trying to determine the hows and whys of valuing scholarship at their institutions. |
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Baboo believes that research on retention will prove an effective aid to help colleges and universities do a better job with their minority students. |
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As many of you know, she is kicking the tires of colleges right now. |
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Last week, the four Berlin universities and three of the four advanced technical colleges also withdrew from the local government employers' association. |
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In many cases, a revolving door approach to higher administration on select campuses has hampered our colleagues, and colleges and or schools from achieving collective goals. |
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By the time students enter colleges or universities, if they do, their ideas and values about thinking and knowing will have been years in the making. |
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Large universities may not be representative of experiences at mid-size or small colleges. |
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Dr. schiller sees a future where players can be compensated and colleges spin off the sports programs into a private entity. |
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He fears that abolition of the Research Assessment Exercise would lead to less research and the relegation of some institutions to the status of FE colleges. |
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Likewise, the land grant colleges transformed America's education system and, as a result, transformed America in a genuinely middle-class nation. |
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The recommendations were carefully worked out with consultations of the royal colleges of anaesthetists, general practitioners, and psychiatrists. |
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Jazz is now entrenched in high schools and colleges, and gets honored with Pulitzer Prizes and genius grants. |
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By questioning established authority, founding new colleges, and revivifying evangelical zeal, it helped to prepare the revolutionary generation in America. |
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For instance, many junior colleges offer classes in high-demand areas such as computer programming, information technology and Web design. |
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Some of us can still remember a time when junior colleges were actually in vogue. |
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Since the junior colleges near his home don't have football teams, Thompson was open to going out of state. |
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It will be delivered by a consortia of approved schools, colleges and employers in 27 areas throughout England in its first year. |
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Not only schools and colleges but the daily earning workers also suffered with the regular bandhs called in the State. |
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She urged her fellow Lorettines to creschools, women's academies and women's colleges. |
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Worcester's colleges have long histories and many notable achievements in collegiate sports. |
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Most of the colleges she applied to were ones she thought she had a good chance of getting into. |
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Cardiff and Bangor followed, and the three colleges came together in 1893 to form the University of Wales. |
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Post eighteen, suitably qualified students attend universities and colleges on the mainland. |
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The two main FE colleges are Northbrook College in Sussex and Basingstoke College of Technology in Hampshire. |
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The best known university in the region is the University of Oxford, famous for its ornate colleges and its rowing teams on the Thames. |
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The two main higher education colleges in the region are Blackburn College and Blackpool and The Fylde College. |
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The main four colleges are Bradford College, Grimsby Institute, Doncaster College and Hull College. |
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The region has the lowest number of people registered on higher education courses at FE colleges. |
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The region's 34 further education colleges are funded through the Skills Funding Agency and the Young People's Learning Agency. |
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Large colleges include Kingston College, Havering College of Further and Higher Education, and Croydon College. |
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Until the 1990s they also ran colleges of further education and the careers services. |
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The Act also established the Inner London Education Authority to administer schools and colleges in the 12 inner London boroughs. |
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The city has one further education colleges, Liverpool Community College in the city centre. |
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New College was formed from a merger of four smaller further education colleges. |
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This college had its roots in two Anglican teacher training colleges, which were founded in York in 1841 for men and 1846 for women. |
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Over the next century, the colleges gradually diversified their education programmes. |
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Medical education is provided by 29 government and some other private medical colleges. |
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All medical colleges are affiliated with Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. |
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And many schools and colleges organise fairs, festivals, and concerts in which citizens from all levels of society can participate. |
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Most colleges and universities require four years of English in high school. |
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In addition, most colleges and universities only accept one year of ESL English. |
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Community colleges, state colleges, and state universities are examples of public institutions of higher education. |
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Most schools around the world teach at least one foreign language and most colleges and high schools require foreign language before graduation. |
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Education among women became fashionable, partly because of Catherine's influence, and she donated large sums of money to several colleges. |
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About 20 unrelated colleges and universities in the United States were subsequently named after him. |
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The Royal Manchester College of Music was founded in 1893 to provide a northern counterpart to the London musical colleges. |
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As the church grew it established and continues to support theological colleges in Samoa and Fiji. |
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The regulatory body for sixth form colleges was already DfE prior to the 2016 changes. |
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Since then sixth form colleges have spread across the UK and have proved popular with students, their parents, and other groups in the community. |
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Special programs, such as physical rehabilitation therapy, are offered in some colleges as well. |
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Private undergraduate colleges do exist, which are mostly vocational colleges sponsored by private enterprises. |
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There are some private undergraduate colleges, mostly engineering schools, but a majority of these are affiliated to public universities. |
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In addition, there are a few dozen colleges and other institutes of higher learning, as well as about a dozen foreign university extensions. |
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It operates through six different schools, and also provides affiliation to various colleges across the country. |
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Aside from the University of the Philippines, there are other notable state colleges and universities within the archipelago. |
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There are a number of public liberal arts colleges, including the members of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges. |
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In 2012, a number of select colleges were upgraded to university status in a bid to increase the intake of students into the degree program. |
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Bachelor's degrees may take either three or four years to complete and are awarded by colleges and universities. |
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In the United States, Canada, and France, however, all colleges of pharmacy have now phased out the degree in favor of the Pharm. |
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This does not cover all students at private universities and university colleges. |
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The colleges at the University of Cambridge were originally an incidental feature of the system. |
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The colleges also decide which undergraduates to admit to the university, in accordance with university regulations. |
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Cambridge has 31 colleges, of which three, Murray Edwards, Newnham and Lucy Cavendish, admit women only. |
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All other colleges admit both undergraduate and postgraduate students with no age restrictions. |
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Similarly, college expenditure on student education also varies widely between individual colleges. |
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In addition to the 31 colleges, the university is made up of over 150 departments, faculties, schools, syndicates and other institutions. |
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This is in order to maintain consistency throughout the colleges, some of which receive more applicants than others. |
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The colleges are in charge of giving or arranging most supervisions, student accommodation, and funding most extracurricular activities. |
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In addition to these, individual colleges often promote their own societies and sports teams. |
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Several royal colleges and the Imperial Institute merged to form what is now Imperial College London. |
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Thereafter, an increasing number of students lived in colleges rather than in halls and religious houses. |
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It was not until 1959 that the women's colleges were given full collegiate status. |
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Colleges arrange the tutorial teaching for their undergraduates, and the members of an academic department are spread around many colleges. |
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Not all colleges offer all courses, but they generally cover a broad range of subjects. |
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In addition to residential and dining facilities, the colleges provide social, cultural, and recreational activities for their members. |
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In addition, individual colleges also offer bursaries and funds to help their students. |
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The Clarendon Scholarship is principally funded by Oxford University Press in association with colleges and other partnership awards. |
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For example, some colleges have formal hall six times a week, but in others this only happens occasionally. |
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At most colleges these formal meals require gowns to be worn, and a Latin grace is said. |
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Many other colleges hold smaller events during the year that they call summer balls or parties. |
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There are several more or less quirky traditions peculiar to individual colleges, for example the All Souls mallard song. |
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Unlike most other collegiate societies, musical ensembles actively encourage players from other colleges. |
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In 1836 UCL became one of the two founding colleges of the University of London, which was granted a royal charter in the same year. |
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This contributed to King's and the other large colleges being regarded as de facto universities in their own right. |
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This system was changed in 2007 to enable some colleges to award their own degrees. |
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Coventry also has three further education colleges within city boundaries, City College, Henley College and Hereward College. |
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Alcuin College, one of the colleges of the University of York, England, is named after him. |
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The town is home to the University of Huddersfield and the sixth form colleges Greenhead College, Kirklees College and Huddersfield New College. |
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At some Oxford and Cambridge colleges a toast is still drunk to celebrate Oak Apple Day. |
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Although offering a range of degree courses, these colleges primarily provide training for those wishing to enter the teaching profession. |
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The university has formal agreements with other colleges in Northern Ireland and operates several outreach schemes to rural areas. |
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There are also local community colleges with generally more open admission policies, shorter academic programs, and lower tuition. |
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The geology of Anglesey is notably complex and is frequently used for geology field trips by schools and colleges. |
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Students aged 16 or older may study at colleges in England for their GCE Advanced Level or vocational qualifications. |
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Bell received numerous honorary degrees from colleges and universities to the point that the requests almost became burdensome. |
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There are three sixth form colleges, all of which were previously grammar schools. |
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Irish language summer colleges in the Gaeltacht are attended by tens of thousands of teenagers annually. |
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There are also more than 90 registered private commercial colleges in Nova Scotia. |
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Unlike sixth form colleges, the staff join lecturers' rather than teachers' unions. |
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At the beginning of the nineteenth century, Scotland's five university colleges had no entrance exams. |
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In 1992 the distinction between universities and colleges was removed, creating a series of new universities. |
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In 1992, under the Further and Higher Education Act 1992, the distinction between universities and colleges was removed. |
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Many colleges offer leisure learning and training programmes designed to meet the needs of business. |
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The colleges were originally established from the mid 19th century to the early 20th century. |
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The London Institute originally chose not to apply because its individual colleges were internationally recognised in their own right. |
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Many honours and awards have been received by students, staff and alumni of the six colleges. |
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Other colleges and universities emphasize curricula in sciences and technology, military studies, religion, and medicine. |
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As a collegiate university, its main functions are divided between the academic departments of the university and 16 colleges. |
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Durham City is the main location of the university and contains 14 of the 16 colleges along with most of the academic departments. |
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As Warden, they are responsible for the 14 maintained colleges of the University. |
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Tijuana is home to many private Primary Schools, Secondary Schools and High Schools as well as nationally high ranked colleges and universities. |
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Nearly all the religious denominations set up their own schools and colleges to train ministers. |
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To promote their viewpoints, the two sides established academies and colleges, including Princeton and Williams College. |
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Because the established Church of Scotland controlled the divinity faculties of the universities, the Free Church set up its own colleges. |
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Esquivel said only eight percent of colleges provide a liberal education to four percent of students in the United States. |
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The two rival colleges often clashed, sometimes in court, but also in brawls between students on the streets of Aberdeen. |
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During this time, both colleges made notable intellectual contributions to the Scottish Enlightenment. |
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The original buildings of both colleges which united to form the University are much admired architectural features of Aberdeen. |
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The university's coat of arms incorporates those of the founders and locations of the two colleges it is derived from. |
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Due to the more than 30 colleges and universities located in the city, Atlanta is considered a center for higher education. |
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Other 3rd level institutions include Griffith College Cork, a private institution, and various other colleges. |
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Research institutes linked to the third level colleges in the city support the research and innovation capacity of the city and region. |
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It also recommended that the colleges should be unsectarian in nature and that they should exclude the teaching of theology. |
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This charter was granted to the new University of Wales in 1893, allowing the colleges to award degrees as members of this institution. |
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The chancellor was set ex officio as the Prince of Wales, and the position of operational head would rotate among heads of the colleges. |
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Prior to the foundation of the federal university, these three colleges had prepared students for the examinations of the University of London. |
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The existing colleges became constituent institutions and the two new member institutions became university colleges. |
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Such organisations include charities, businesses, colleges, universities, and cities. |
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A number of Canadian universities and colleges were founded or reconstituted under Royal Charter. |
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There are also smaller specialised colleges, including Griffith College Dublin, The Gaiety School of Acting and the New Media Technology College. |
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The department manages 16 colleges and the region of Normandy manages 9 schools. |
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The state has 11 public colleges and universities, five tribal community colleges, and four private schools. |
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In many of the rural areas, there is no nearby sixth form and so sixth form colleges are found in larger towns. |
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The City College Norwich and the College of West Anglia are colleges covering Norwich and King's Lynn as well as Norfolk as a whole. |
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It has additionally been amongst the most selective colleges in the United States since its founding. |
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There is no reason why all colleges and universities should be cut to the same pattern. |
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Barnstable and Harwich have each sent multiple players to Division 1 colleges for baseball. |
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Some schools have sixth forms and others transfer their sixth formers to colleges. |
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There are three further education colleges, New College, Swindon, Wiltshire College and Swindon College, providing some higher education. |
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More than 72,000 people work downtown, and over 40,000 students attend classes at its universities and colleges. |
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In some parts of the country, special sixth form colleges were introduced beginning in a particularly important phase of student life. |
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There is one quality which unites all great and perdurable writers, you don't NEED schools and colleges to keep 'em alive. |
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Whilst Irish colleges are still popular, a greater variety of summer camps are now on offer catering for a range of interests. |
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These camps are often run by colleges or universities, and are usually for children in junior or senior high school. |
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Contemporary anthropology is an established science with academic departments at most universities and colleges. |
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Cologne is home to numerous universities and colleges, and host to some 72,000 students. |
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Rome is a nationwide and major international centre for higher education, containing numerous academies, colleges and universities. |
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Teacher training colleges and religious seminaries are found in many parts of the country. |
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Seville is also home to many international schools and colleges that cater to American students who come to study abroad. |
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Pernambuco had main universities and colleges founded in the 19th and 20th century. |
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