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  1. Bretton Hall College of Education was a higher education college in West Bretton in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England. It opened as a teacher training college in 1949 with awards from the University of Leeds. The college merged with the University of Leeds in 2001 and the campus closed in 2007.

  2. Bretton Hall College of Education era una universidad de educación superior en West Bretton en West Riding of Yorkshire, Inglaterra. Se inauguró como escuela de formación de profesores en 1949 con premios de la Universidad de Leeds. La universidad se fusionó con la Universidad de Leeds en 2001 y el campus cerró en 2007.

  3. Bretton Hall College was founded in 1947 by Sir Alec Clegg, Chief Education Officer of the West Riding of Yorkshire County Council. It first began as a training college for teachers of music, art and drama with courses awarded by the University of Leeds.

  4. 26 de sept. de 2020 · Its occupants consisted of the principal, six tutors (in Education, English, Art, Music and PE) and 56 students (26 women and 30 men). Despite continually shaky finances, the college developed: by 1963 there were clusters of modernist buildings all across the site, including eleven “hostels” as accommodation for up to 300 students.

  5. 19 de ene. de 2024 · Bretton Hall College of Education was a higher education college in West Bretton in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England. It opened as a teacher training college in 1949 with awards from the University of Leeds.

  6. This chapter discusses the formation of Bretton Hall College as a teacher training college for the arts, and how this influential creative institution shaped teacher training through the arts from 1949 in the West Riding.

  7. By the mid 20th century, the hall’s days as a home were over. Sir Alec Clegg, Chief Education Officer for the West Riding, oversaw the creation of the college at Bretton Hall in 1949. He helped establish the area as a pioneering and innovative place for education.