Swansea College (Gower College Swansea) Explained

Swansea College
Type:Further Education College
Principal:Jeff Gunningham
Administrative Staff:1,000
Students:15,000
City:Swansea, West Glamorgan
Country:Wales
Address:Tycoch Road
Postcode:SA2 9EB

Swansea College was a further education college in Swansea. It was one of the largest further education colleges in Wales[1] with over 15,000 students and employing approximately 1,000 staff. Swansea College merged with Gorseinon College on 20 August 2010 to create a single sixth form and further education college for the Swansea area called Gower College Swansea.

Swansea College provided preparation for a number of qualifications, including GCSEs, the IB Diploma Programme, A-levels and HNDs, as well as a number of vocational courses leading to BTEC First and National Diplomas, NVQs and other similar qualifications. It also ran EFL programmes for non-native speakers of English.[2]

The College's mission statement was: We will provide high quality, relevant provision for all our learners.

Campus and catchment area

The College operated on several different sites in Swansea.

Faculties and services

A Level and the arts

The faculty was split into two areas – a specially designed 'B Floor' at the College's Tycoch campus and purpose-built Arts, Media and Performance suites at Llwyn y Bryn. The faculty provided preparation for a number of qualifications, including A-levels, the IB and HNDs, as well as a number of vocational courses leading to BTEC First and National Diplomas, NVQs and other similar qualifications.[2]

2008 results

Sport, lifestyle and business

Extra curricular opportunities were offered, including work experience, educational visits, visiting speakers and entrepreneurship guidance. Courses were designed to provide the student with the knowledge and skills to progress into employment or Higher Education in sport, leisure, tourism, business, hospitality or public services.

The faculty also housed the Centre for Sporting Development which is dedicated to the physical, personal and intellectual development of student athletes.

Engineering, IT and technology

These courses were designed to provide students with a choice of routes into a range of disciplines for either Higher Education or employment. They gave the student a chance to develop the skills, knowledge and understanding that underpin the creation of Engineering and IT systems and services.

The faculty had fully equipped workrooms as well as specialist computer software.

Social and vocational studies

Students of hairdressing, beauty and complementary therapy could take part in work experience in a salon environment at either its Broadway or Cefn Hengoed Centre. Health and social care courses were also offered.

Community operations

Community Operations worked closely with partner organisations in Swansea to help to coordinate basic skills and adult community courses throughout the city. Opportunities were on offer to help people improve their employability by encouraging confidence and developing skills for life.

Training for business

The Business College was the commercial arm of Swansea College. Many programmes carried national accreditation. Others were bespoke, tailored to the student's particular needs. The Business College was based in Swansea Vale and offers training courses such as NEBOSH, IOSH, CIEH, BIIAB, OCR, RTITB, CMI, ILM, First Aid and NVQ.

Work-based learning

Swansea College offered modern apprenticeships throughout the year. There are different levels of apprenticeships available and on successful completion students are awarded with a nationally recognised Modern Apprenticeship framework.

Levels included:Foundation Modern Apprentice (NVQ Level 2) Advanced Modern Apprentice (NVQ Level 3/4) Modern Skills Diploma (NVQ Level 4/5)

Results and awards

In 2008, the College's pass rates were:

Level 3 courses

Level 2 courses

Others

Awards

The College won the LSDA Beacon Award (for Staff Development in ILT) in 1999-2000.[4]

History

The original Swansea College was built in 1825 and was situated near the Swansea Dock area. This building also housed the guildhall, law courts and juvenile centre after being rebuilt in 1848. From 1960, the building was solely used as a college of further education, housing 700 students. After rapid expansion, the college relocated to a new site in Tycoch in 1971.[5]

The further education corporation with the name of "Swansea College" was established by the Education (Further Education Corporations) Order 1992 (S.I. 1992/2097)[6]

Swansea College merged with Gorseinon College on 20 August 2010 to create a single sixth form and further education college for the Swansea area called Gower College Swansea.[6] [7] [8] [9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.independent.co.uk/student/into-university/az-uni-colleges/swansea-college-459087.html Summary for HE students by The Independent.
  2. http://www.swancoll.ac.uk Swansea College website
  3. http://www.swancoll.ac.uk/Webpages/News/displayfull.aspx?id=299 Press release about 2008 results
  4. http://www.aoc.co.uk/download.cfm?docid=498FDFE7-4CDF-43A3-874142D92D24A2CA AoC PDF file celebrating 10 years of the Beacon Awards – p11
  5. Web site: 2013-08-09 . Gower College Swansea . 2023-06-23 . The Independent. London.
  6. WELSH STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS 2010 No. 1876 (W.181) EDUCATION, WALES The Gorseinion [sic] College Further Education Corporation and Swansea College Further Education Corporation (Dissolution) Order 2010 https://www.legislation.gov.uk/wsi/2010/1876/made
  7. http://www.gorseinon.ac.uk/index.php/component/content/article/1-latest-news/219-a-new-name-for-a-new-college Gorseinon College – News – 5 February 2010
  8. http://www.swancoll.ac.uk/node/852 Swansea College – News – 5 February 2010
  9. http://www.thisissouthwales.co.uk/southwalesnews/New-merged-Gorseinon-Swansea-colleges/article-1810313-detail/article.html New name for merged Gorseinon and Swansea colleges – News report 5 February 2010