City of Oxford College
College Logo | |
Type | Further Education College |
---|---|
Location |
Oxpens Road Oxford Oxfordshire OX1 1SA England Coordinates: 51°44′58″N 1°15′52″W / 51.74955°N 1.26451°W |
DfE URN | 134153 |
Gender | Coeducational |
Website | City of Oxford College |
City of Oxford College[1] is a further education college in Oxford, England. It has two campuses – one in the city centre, and one in Blackbird Leys to the south east of Oxford city.
Introduction
It used to be called Oxford & Cherwell Valley College (OCVC) but changed name when the Oxford & Cherwell Valley College Group reorganised and become the Activate Learning group in 2013.
City of Oxford College provides vocational training programmes, primarily for the post-16 sector, across different subjects. Programmes include vocational training for school leavers and professionals/adults, A-levels, apprenticeships, higher education, international study, learning for leisure, and courses to help the unemployed get back into work.
History
1.1 Oxford College of Further Education
Founded in 1960, and based at the current Blackbird Leys and Oxford city centre campuses, the Oxford College of Further Education offered courses to students at all levels.
At the turn of the millennium the student population was made up of 1,872 full-time and 7,533 part-time students. The College was divided into three faculties: arts, engineering services, and business and technology.
1.2 Oxford and Cherwell College
On 31 July 2003, Oxford College of Further Education merged with North Oxfordshire College in Banbury to become Oxford and Cherwell College.
The newly-merged college also became home to the Rycotewood Furniture Centre, which moved from Thame – where it belonged to Rycotewood College – to the Oxford city centre campus.
1.3 Oxford & Cherwell Valley College
A new campus was opened in Bicester in 2005. This is when the college became Oxford & Cherwell Valley College (OCVC). In 2010 OCVC, along with the Learning Skills Network (LSN), took responsibility for running Reading College. OCVC then became the Oxford & Cherwell Valley College Group.
1.4 City of Oxford College
In 2013, the OCVC Group reorganised and restructured. It became Activate Learning, and the two OCVC colleges (Oxford and Banbury) changed their names.
OCVC (Oxford) became City of Oxford College.
Subjects and courses
2.1 Full-time study
Subjects available for full-time study at City of Oxford College include art and design, brickwork, business and enterprise, caring and health, catering and hospitality, construction, electrical, engineering, foundation studies, furniture, hair and beauty, ICT, joinery, media, motor vehicle, music, painting and decorating, performing arts, plumbing, sport, travel and tourism, and uniformed public services.
Construction (and related), electrical and motor vehicle are taught at the Blackbird Leys campus.
2.2 A-levels
The sixth-form centre at City of Oxford College offers more than 10 A-level subjects!
2.3 Higher education
Higher education (HE) is delivered across the Activate Learning group. Different HE programmes are delivered at the different colleges.
The group delivers higher education (university-level) programmes in art and design, business, care, computing, engineering, furniture, motorsports, policing and sports coaching. These programmes include HNDs, foundation degrees and honours degrees.
The group also delivers the PGCE teaching and training qualification.
The foundation degree (Level 5) and honours degree (Level 6) programmes are delivered in partnership with local universities, which include Oxford Brookes University[2] and Bucks New University.
At City of Oxford College there are HE programmes in art and design, business, care, furniture, policing and sports coaching.
2.4 International students
International students are welcome at City of Oxford College. Activate Learning runs an international study programme for students from overseas.
2.5 Part-time study
Part-time study can be professional (qualification based) or leisure (non-qualification based). Part-time subjects with qualifications include accounting, business, catering, hair and beauty, ICT, first aid, teaching and training, security, sport and skills for life.
Subjects without qualifications focus mostly on the creative arts (e.g. art, photography, textiles, ceramics) and woodworking.
2.6 Apprenticeships and work-based training
City of Oxford College provides apprenticeship training across many of its vocational subjects. These are delivered by Activate Enterprise, the group’s business-to-business service.
2.7 Courses for the unemployed
The college has a Get that Job programme which is for people who are unemployed. It provides free training courses to those who are eligible, and offers help with other skills such as CV writing and interview techniques.
Campuses
City of Oxford College has campuses in Oxford city centre and Blackbird Leys.
3.1 Oxford city centre
The campus has on-site facilities for students to do their training. These include furniture workshops, hair/beauty salons and a restaurant, and studios for music, performing arts and creative media. The salons and restaurant are open to customers. Rycotewood Furniture Centre is a specialist centre located on the campus. The campus is undergoing major redevelopment during 2014.
3.2 Blackbird Leys
Blackbird Leys is an Oxford ward located to the south east of the city centre. The campus delivers courses in construction (carpentry, joinery, plumbing, brickwork, and painting and decorating), motor vehicle and electrical installation. It is also home to the college’s Centre for Autistic Learners.
Specialist Centres
4.1 National School of Furniture
The National School of Furniture (NSF) is a partnership between Rycotewood Furniture Centre and Bucks New University. The partnership was formed in 2010 to offer furniture training from Level 1 (certificate) through to Level 8 (PhD). Rycotewood Furniture Centre, on the City of oxford city centre campus, offers training provision from Level 1 to Level 6, which is a BA Honours degree (top-up).
Rycotewood is an established name in the furniture industry. Rycotewood College was set up in 1938 in Thame, Oxfordshire, to deliver training in furniture and engineering.
In 2003 the furniture department moved to the college and became the Rycotewood Furniture Centre.