Middlesbrough College
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Established | 1 August 1995[1] |
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Type | Further education college |
Principal | Mr Mike Hopkins |
Location | Middlehaven Dock Street Middlesbrough North Yorkshire TS2 1AD England Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Local authority | Middlesbrough |
DfE number | 806/8007 |
DfE URN | 130570 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports Pre-academy reports |
Students | 14,232 (2013/14) |
Gender | Mixed |
Ages | 16+ |
Website | Middlesbrough College |
Middlesbrough College, located on one campus at Middlehaven, Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England, is the largest college on Teesside.
Contents
Admissions
It provides predominantly further education, but also selected higher education provision, and until 2008, existed on four different sites across the town (Marton, Acklam, Kirby and Longlands). Relocation to Middlehaven was one of Tees Valley Regeneration's major redevelopment projects.
It is situated just north of the A66 and Middlesbrough town centre, next to Middlesbrough Dock and the dock tower, and close to the Transporter Bridge and Middlesbrough FC's Riverside Stadium. The college is approximately 0.5 miles (1 km) from Middlesbrough railway station.
Student numbers during the 2013/14 college year were 14,232 (2013/14 annual report).[2]
History and estates
Former schools
Three of the pre-2008 sites were those of the former grammar schools when run by the Middlesbrough Education Committee:
- Middlesbrough High School (Boys) – opened in October 1870 as a fee-paying school.
- Middlesbrough High School (Girls) – opened in August 1874. A joint new building was opened on Albert Road in 1877, but the boys and girls were taught separately. The central Middlesbrough site was in use until 1960, and then moved to Marton Road.
- the girls-only Kirby Grammar School - opened in October 1911 on the corner of Roman Road and Orchard Road in Linthorpe.
- the boys-only Acklam Hall Grammar School for Boys – opened in September 1935 when the numbers at Middlesbrough High School for Boys outgrew the capacity of the buildings.
Middlesbrough High School for Girls was had 450 girls in the 1950s, and 600 in 1962. Middlesbrough High School for Boys had around 450 boys in the 1950s, and 600 in the mid-1960s. The boys' and girls' schools, both three-form entry schools, merged in September 1967 to form Middlesbrough High School, an ages 13–18 comprehensive with around 1,200 boys and girls and 500 in the sixth form. Middlesbrough High School became Middlesbrough and Marton Sixth Form College in 1974. In April 1974, the school had been taken over by the Country of Cleveland (Cleveland County Council).
Acklam Hall Grammar School had 600 boys in the mid-1960s. It merged with Kirby to form Acklam High School, a comprehensive school, in 1968. This school then further changed in 1974 to Acklam Sixth Form College and King's Manor 11–16 School. The King's Manor School suffered a fire and moved across the road, Hall Drive, to share a site with Hall Garth School (now Hall Garth Community Arts College).
Former colleges
Longlands College of Further Education was on Douglas Street which opened in 1957, and at first partly used by the Constantine Technical College. It was near the junction of Marton Road (A172) and Longlands Road (A1085) just west of North Ormesby.
Kirby College of Further Education was separate and established in 1968 on Roman Road. It had departments such as Food and Fashion, Catering, Hairdressing, and Business Studies, and taught single O-level subjects (re-takes or part-time). It was not used as a sixth form college.
Foundation through two mergers
Teesside Tertiary College was created on 1 August 1995 by the merger of Longlands College of Further Education and Marton Sixth Form College, and was based on Marton Road next to the James Cook University Hospital.
Middlesbrough College was formed when Kirby College of Further Education merged with Acklam Sixth Form College, also on 1 August 1995.
From 1992, these two colleges had been funded by the Further Education Funding Council for England. In 1995, Teesside Tertiary College offered £1,200 for every person signing up for A-level course who had eight A grades at GCSE.
Merger and move to new site
Middlesbrough College merged with Teesside Tertiary College on 1 August 2002, with it now being spread over four sites. Since 2001, these colleges had been funded by the Learning and Skills Council for England. Once the merger was complete, planning began for the relocation to a single site at Middlehaven in central Middlesbrough. Building work for the new college building at Middlehaven began in early 2007. In September 2008, the four separate sites were eventually consolidated onto a single site with the opening of the new £68 million Middlesbrough college building.[3][4]
The Middlehaven site has since grown with the opening of new college buildings adjacent to the main building. MC6 & MC SPORT (a sixth form centre & sports academy) opened in October 2012,[5] and MC STEM (science, technology, engineering & maths) was officially opened by Professor Brian Cox in November 2015.[6]
Former sites
Middlesbrough college's four previous sites were:-
- Marton Road (Marton Campus)
- Douglas Street (Longlands Campus)
- Roman Road (Kirby Campus)
- Hall Drive (Acklam Campus)
Most of the 18-acre (73,000 m2) Marton Campus is in the process of becoming a housing estate with 275 houses being built by Taylor Woodrow. The remainder of the site was encompassed into part of the new Middlesbrough Sports Village with an outdoor velodrome replacing the football pitches.[7]
The 9-acre (36,000 m2) Kirby Campus now has 84 houses and 53 apartments built on it by Taylor Woodrow. The former Kirby Grammar School has become 21 apartments. The 9-acre (36,000 m2) Longlands Campus has become 104 houses built by Taylor Woodrow. This includes the former playing field and sports hall.
Curriculum
Courses range from university-oriented academics to vocational education. Selected higher education courses exist by virtue of an indirectly funded partnership arrangement with the Teesside University.
Alumni
Acklam Hall Grammar School for Boys
- Roland Carl Backhouse, Professor of Computing, University of Nottingham
- Duncan Hall, chief executive of the Teesside Development Corporation 1987–98
- Strachan Heppell CB, chairman of the European Medicines Agency from 1994 to 2000
- Air Vice-Marshal Robert Hooks CBE
- Adm Sir Michael Livesay, (first) Commander of HMS Invincible from 1979 to 1982
- Colin Mays CMG, High Commissioner to the Seychelles from 1983 to 1986, and Bahamas from 1986 to 1991
- Brian Tanner CBE, chief executive of Somerset County Council from 1990 to 1997.
- Alan Old, England Rugby Union International 1972–1978
- Chris Old, England Cricket International 1972–1981
Middlesbrough High School for Boys
- Robert Cant, Labour MP from 1966 to 1983 for Stoke-on-Trent Central
- Sir Fife Clark, Director General from 1954 to 1971 of the Central Office of Information, and former President of the Institute of Public Relations
- Commodore John Dobson CBE DSC
- George Elliott (footballer)
- Sir Sadler Forster CBE, Chairman from 1960 to 1970 of the English Industrial Estates Corporation (became English Partnerships)
- Sir John Watson Gibson CBE, civil engineer, worked with Pauling & Co. to build the Jebel Aulia Dam, and in the war designed the breakwaters for the Mulberry harbours
- Sir Denis Hamilton DSO, Editor of The Sunday Times, Chairman of Reuters from 1979 to 1985, President from 1981 to 1983 of the Commonwealth Press Union, and father of Nigel Hamilton
- Sir Ellis Hunter, former managing director of Dorman Long from 1938 to 1961, the main historic local steel company, and President from 1945 to 1953 of the British Iron and Steel Federation who resisted nationalisation, with Sir Andrew Rae Duncan, of the British steel industry
- Prof Chris Lamb, John Innes Professor of Biology, and director of the John Innes Centre, from 1999 to 2009 at the University of East Anglia
- Marcus Langley, former aircraft designer for de Havilland in the 1930s who worked with A. H. Tiltman, and became Chief Designer at British Aircraft Manufacturing in 1936, who produced important work in the early 1930s on metal aircraft construction
- J. D. Mackie, historian and Professor of Scottish History and Literature from 1930 to 1957 at the University of Glasgow
- Horatio Pemberton, Chief Engineer Surveyor from 1957 to 1967 of Lloyd's Register, and chairman from 1966–7 of the Council of Engineering Institutions (became the Engineering Council)
- Sir Edward Pickering, editor from 1957 to 1962 of the Daily Express, and chairman from 1970 to 1974 of IPC Magazines
- Dr Alan Robertson CBE, pesticide chemist, and chairman from 1981 to 1983 of the British Nutrition Foundation
- George Scott, editor from 1974 to 1979 of The Listener
- Cyril Smith OBE, Professor of Pianoforte from 1934 to 1974 at the Royal College of Music
- Norman Thompson CBE, managing director from 1971 to 1974 of Cunard Line
Kirby Grammar School
- Anna Raeburn, agony aunt and radio broadcaster.
- Professor Sue Scott, Feminist and Sociologist, Managing Editor of Discover Society http://discoversociety.org
See also
- The former Middlesbrough College of Education on Borough Road, a teacher-training college which became part of Teesside University (itself the former Constantine Technical College)
- Redcar & Cleveland College
- Cleveland College of Art and Design
Gallery
References
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External links
- College homepage
- Acklam Through The Ages at BBC Tees.
- Memories of Kirby Malayan Teacher Training College
- Formation of Teesside Tertiary College in 1995
- Formation of the college in 1995
- Merger in 2002