Alexander Mackie College

Alexander Mackie College was a tertiary education institution that trained school teachers in Sydney, Australia. It existed from 1958-1974[1] continuing as Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education from 1975-1981.[2] In January 1982 the College was reformed into two institutes, St George Institute of Education [3] and City Art Institute [4] under the umbrella of the new Sydney College of Advanced Education.[5]

History

Alexander Mackie College (AMC) was established in 1958 at Paddington.[1] Mr. W. E. Hart was its first principal.[1] The college trained primary and high school teachers in art, music, science and social science.[6][1]

Due to increasing student numbers the main teaching campus in Albion Avenue was too small and the college conducted classes at five different sites in inner-Sydney.[1]

From 1 September 1971, Alexander Mackie College was declared a college of advanced education within the Department of Education, NSW.[7]

Notable people

Students:

Teachers:

gollark: It's *just* a general suggestion to not add excessive things to your explanation for no reason.
gollark: By default we (should) basically just treat a new proposition as false, while remembering that we don't actually *know* and that new evidence might become available.
gollark: It's a Martian camouflage field.
gollark: By default, it's "don't know but you should probably say it isn't".
gollark: Then you can't make any meaningful statement about god.

References

  1. "Agency details: Alexander Mackie College (AMC) (1958 - 1974) / Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education (AMCAE) (1975 - 1981)" (PDF). University of New South Wales Archives. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  2. Donnan, Noel; Layton, Jim; Alexander Mackie (1978), Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education going places, Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education, ISBN 978-0-908116-08-9
  3. "St George Institute of Education - Administrative History" (PDF). UNSW Archives. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  4. "City Art Institute - Administrative History" (PDF). UNSW Archives. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  5. "Sydney College of Advanced Education - Administrative History". The University of Sydney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  6. Alexander Mackie (1950), Calendar, Govt. Printer, retrieved 21 January 2015
  7. "NSW Government Gazette". 95 (37). August 1971. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Further reading

  • Alexander Mackie (1975), The Art School, Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education, retrieved 28 January 2015
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