Type | Private |
---|---|
Established | 1964 |
Principal | Helen Loftus |
Location | , , PO19 1SB , 50°50′07″N 0°47′20″W / 50.83528°N 0.78889°W |
Language | English |
Website | www |
Chichester College is a college of further education in Chichester, West Sussex, England. It has a second campus at Brinsbury, near Pulborough. It is a member of the Collab Group which represents the largest colleges in England.[1]
Chichester College has over 20,000 students, of whom over 5,000 are full-time (about 4,000 are between 16 and 18 years old; 1,000 are over 19 and several hundred are taking university level courses). Students can choose from a wide range of courses including: A-levels (about 900 students); BTEC Diplomas at Level 3 (vocational A-level equivalents); and many vocational qualifications that prepare young people and adults for working life.[2]
Brinsbury campus is part of a 570-acre estate and has its own commercial farm with dairy, beef, sheep, pig and arable enterprise all of which are used as the basis for much of the practical teaching.
The Chichester College group was rated 'Outstanding' in all areas of the Ofsted inspection framework in March 2020.[3][4]
The Falkland Islands Government pays the college to educate Falkland Islanders for national diplomas and NVQs.[5]
Chichester College, opened in 1964, as the major centre for a wide range of academic, commercial, scientific, technical, recreational and adult education courses in the south western part of West Sussex. The college is set in Westgate Fields within sight and to the south west of the Chichester Cathedral, half a mile from the Chichester Market Cross.
On 23 February 1972 David Bowie performed at the college as part of the Ziggy Stardust Tour.[citation needed] In April 1966, "The Who" performed in the main hall of the college. The fee for hiring the band was £350.. the evening made a loss!
Brinsbury campus is in West Sussex, three miles north of Pulborough. It was founded as an agricultural education centre for West Sussex and was a base for Land Girls during the Second World War. In 1966 it was officially designated the West Sussex School of Agriculture. It became Brinsbury College in 1998 and then merged with Chichester College in 2002.[6]
Chichester College was awarded an Ofsted "Outstanding" in 2014.[7] The financial situation of the college in 2014 was later described by the chief executive, Shelagh Legrave, as "really grim".[8]
In 2017, merged with Crawley College (formerly Central Sussex College) creating the largest college group in Sussex.[9][10] It merged again in 2019 with Worthing College.[8]
In 2020, the group reopened Haywards Heath College.[8]
The Chichester College group was rated 'Outstanding' in all areas of the Ofsted inspection framework in March 2020.[3][4]
Facilities at both campuses include laboratories, classrooms, libraries, computer suites, and specific facilities for vocational courses such as:[11]