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When did Glamorgan College become a university?
When did Glamorgan Polytechnic become a university?
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What happened to Glamorgan College of Education?
When was Glamorgan Polytechnic merged with Caerleon College?
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Glamorgan Polytechnic (1970) In 1970 the college became a polytechnic – a tertiary educational institution offering higher diplomas, undergraduate and postgraduate degrees. Glamorgan Polytechnic merged with the Glamorgan College of Education in Barry and was re-designated as the Polytechnic of Wales in 1975.
In 1970, the college became a polytechnic. [5] In 1914 Glamorgan County Council created Glamorgan Training College to train women to teach. It originally only took women who lived locally but in 1947, when Ellen Evans was the principal, it became co-educational and in 1962 it also accepted male students.
In 1949, became Glamorgan Technical College and, nine years later, Glamorgan College of Technology. In 1970 became Glamorgan Polytechnic and in 1975 the Polytechnic of Wales, gaining university status in 1992.
The school of mines was later to become the Polytechnic of Wales, before gaining the status of University of Glamorgan in 1992. The name for the new merged university was chosen following a research exercise amongst interested parties and announced in December 2012 by the prospective vice-chancellor of the university, Julie Lydon, [ 7 ] who ...
Glamorgan Polytechnic merged with the Glamorgan College of Education in Barry and was re-designated as the Polytechnic of Wales in 1975, before being awarded university status as the University of Glamorgan in 1992.
In 1949, became Glamorgan Technical College, nine years later Glamorgan College of Technology, in 1970 became Glamorgan Polytechnic and in 1975 the Polytechnic of Wales. Became a...
Aug 24, 2012 · The university’s first students arrived in Treforest on October 1913 when it was called the South Wales and Monmouthshire School of Mines. It went on to have a number of other identities including ‘Glamorgan College of Technology’, ‘Glamorgan Polytechnic’ and the ‘Polytechnic of Wales’.