Jump to content

West London College

Coordinates: 51°29′29″N 0°12′52″W / 51.4915°N 0.2145°W / 51.4915; -0.2145
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

West London College
Address
Map
Gliddon Road

Hammersmith
,
London
,
W14 9BL

Coordinates51°29′29″N 0°12′52″W / 51.4915°N 0.2145°W / 51.4915; -0.2145
Information
TypeFurther and Higher Education College
Established1881-2002 – founding institutions
2002 – Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College
Department for Education URN130408 Tables
OfstedReports
CEO & PrincipalKaren Redhead OBE
GenderMixed
Age14+
Enrollment13,000+ (2016)[1]
Websitehttp://www.wlc.ac.uk/

West London College, legally known as the Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College is a large further and higher education college in West London, England, formed in 2002 by the merger between Ealing Tertiary College and Hammersmith and West London College. It is based across three campuses located in Ealing, Hammersmith and Southall; the main campus of the college is situated on the north side of the busy A4 dual-carriageway, between Hammersmith and Earls Court. There are over 13,000 students as of 2016, providing training and development from entry level to postgraduate.[1]

It is a member of the Collab Group of high performing colleges.[2]

History

[edit]
The College Front Ealing, Hammersmith & West London College.

In 1881, Hammersmith School of Art was established in Brook Green. There was also the Hammersmith College of Art and Building located in Lime Grove, Shepherds Bush. This college ran an Architecture course accredited by the RIBA and an Interior Design course. There were also facilities and studios in which were taught textile design, ceramics, sculpture and print-making. The 'building' side of the college included workshops in which the traditional building trades were taught, including plumbing, welding, plastering and brick-laying. The 'cross-discipline' opportunities that the close proximity that these departments afforded students was deliberate. That the sculpture students could learn from the welding classes (both instructors and apprentices) and the interior design students from the textile design students and the architecture students from the building trades apprentices was a recognized benefit of the graduates of the Hammersmith College of Art and Building. In 1970 the Architecture department of Hammersmith College of Art and Building merged with Woolwich Polytechnic to form Thames Polytechnic, which in 1993 became the University of Greenwich. The architectural teaching staff included Arthur Korn. In 1975 Hammersmith College of Art merged with West London College and forming Hammersmith and West London College.[3]

Ealing Grammar School for Boys was opened in 1913 as Ealing County School and expanded in 1936, also known as Ealing County Grammar School. It had the Ealonian Hall. In 1974, Ealing borough adopted the comprehensive education system and the school became Ealing Green High School, a boys' school. Another institute Thomas Huxley College existed until 1980. In 1992, the school turned into Ealing Tertiary College.[3]

The Southall Technical College was founded in 1929 as a technical school for boys, merging with Southall Grammar School in 1963 (now Villiers High School). The college's skills provision moved to the Norwood Hall Institute of Horticultural Education, and this became part of Ealing Tertiary College.[3]

Acton Technical College is another former institution that is a predecessor of the current college.

In January 2002, Hammersmith and West London College merged with Ealing Tertiary College to form Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College. At the time it was the largest further education college in London with over 30,000 enrollments.[4] It changed its public brand name to West London College from 2018.

Campuses

[edit]

Hammersmith and Fulham College

[edit]
View to Hammersmith campus in spring 2013

Hammersmith is the largest campus, with over 10,000 students. The College offers a large number of full-time and part-time courses across a broad range of subjects for students of different ages, abilities and needs.

In the 1970s, the college was built on 14 acres (5.7 ha) former playing fields of St Paul's School, despite campaigns opposing the development.[5] The College was designed by the Greater London Council Architects' Department, under the supervision of Bob Giles, the project architect, in a Brutalist style inspired by Alvar Aalto's Säynätsalo Town Hall.[6]

Completed in 1980, the college replaced 11 separate sites across West London.[6]

Ealing Green College

[edit]
A SiDe View Of Front.
Side front View Ealing, Hammersmith & West London College.
A SiDe View Of Front.
Park View Ealing, Hammersmith & West London College.

Located at The Green in Ealing, it offers a range of full-time post-GCSE, academic and vocational courses, as well as tuition in ESOL and English as a Foreign Language (EFL). Recent refurbishments have significantly improved the Sixth Form Centre and a new £11.5m specialist centre, the Ealing Institute of Media, was launched in December 2005. It is situated in the former Ealing Green High School.

Southall Community College

[edit]

On Beaconsfield Road in Southall, students here have access to the Southall Sports Centre run by the London Borough of Ealing, the Sixth Form Centre, and separate facilities for adult learning and a vocational centre.

Acton

[edit]

A former campus existed on Gunnersbury Lane, Acton.

Achievements and awards

[edit]

The college was a Beacon Status College, awarded by the Quality Improvement Agency. In 2008, the International Centre at the college was awarded the Queen's Award for Enterprise: International Trade. In 2012, West London College (then Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College) became the first Further Education college in London to receive the 'AoC Charter for International Excellence'. The charter is awarded to FE colleges that show a strong commitment to quality assurance and implement an ethical approach to all aspects of their international activities. In 2017, the college won the Times Educational Supplement FE Award for Outstanding use of Technology for Teaching, Learning and Assessment.[7]

Former teachers

[edit]
  • Prof David Blake, composer (taught music at the boys' grammar school from 1961 to 1962)
  • David Tanner (taught history and Head of Sixth Form at Ealing Green)
  • Arthur Korn (architect)
  • Chris Tooke & Peter Brett (authors) Carpentry & Joinery publications
  • Geoffrey Bocking, Keith Critchlow, Roland Whiteside, Harold Bartram, Henry Stephenson, Robin Baker, Anthony Sully - all taught Interior Design at Hammersmith College of Art and Building.
  • Robyn Denny, Dick Smith, Bernard Cohen, Tom Simmons (Art), Mike Caddy(Ceramics), Keith Godwin, Henry Thornton (Sculpture), Paul Copplestone (Art History) all taught at Hammersmith College of Art and Building.

Alumni

[edit]

The Ealing Grammar School for Boys

[edit]


Ealing Green High School

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Ealing, Hammersmith and West London's College". Archived from the original on 3 August 2021. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  2. ^ "Collab Group". Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  3. ^ a b c "Strategic Plan 2019-20 to 2023-24" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 12 August 2021.
  4. ^ "Archived copy". files.ofsted.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 6 March 2022. Retrieved 22 May 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ "Watch Fourteen Acres of Green". BFI Player. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
  6. ^ a b West London Today, 15 January 2020
  7. ^ TES. "TES FE Awards: TES FE Awards 2017". www.tesfeawards.co.uk. Retrieved 10 August 2017.
  8. ^ "The highs and lows of a Reading Champion". Archived from the original on 5 October 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
[edit]