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  1. Claremont Teachers College was Western Australias first post-secondary teaching institution. It opened in 1902 and closed in 1981, when it became a College of Advanced Education then a campus of Edith Cowan University before being acquired by the University of Western Australia.

  2. 20 de jun. de 2016 · For the next 50 years, Claremont Teachers College was the only institution in Western Australia for training teachers. One of its most notable graduates was May O'Brien, the state's first Aboriginal teacher who had to fight for the right to study teaching and rose to become the state superintendent of Aboriginal education.

  3. Seven institutions. Infinite Choices. The Claremont Colleges includes five undergraduate liberal arts colleges and two graduate institutions: Pomona College, Claremont Graduate University, Scripps College, Claremont McKenna College, Harvey Mudd College, Pitzer College and Keck Graduate Institute. Located on contiguous campuses in the Southern California city of Claremont, each

  4. Abstract. This book had its beginning in our belief that it was appropriate in celebrating the seventy-fifth anniversary of Claremont Teachers College to record the significant contribution its staff and students have made to the development of Western Australia.

  5. 15 de nov. de 1987 · Profiles of the 6 Claremont Colleges and How They Grew. Pomona College has several reasons for celebrating. It was listed in a recent U. S. News & World Report magazine as one of the top 10...

  6. The College was established to train teachers in WA, previously done in South Australia. The East Claremont Practising School (Prac) was built adjoining the college in 1905 for the trainee teachers from the College to practise teaching.

  7. Heritage Council Places Database Claremont Teachers College (fmr) A large two storied limestone building, designed by Hillson Beasley and constructed in 1902 and set in extensive grounds; the first teacher's college in the state.