Australian College of the Arts

Australian College of the Arts Pty Ltd (Collarts)  is an Australian independent tertiary education provider, with four campuses in Melbourne, Victoria.

Australian College of the Arts (Collarts)
Other name
Collarts
Former name
AusMusic
Established1993
DeanBen O'Hara
Students950
Location
Melbourne
Websitehttp://www.collarts.edu.au

Originally operating as AusMusic, Collarts was founded in 1993[1] and offers undergraduate degrees to on-campus and online students. Collarts also works closely with a number of secondary schools to provide VET music programs, offering music programmes to school students. Upon successful completion of a VET program, students are awarded a nationally-accredited vocational training certificate.[2]

Collarts has four campuses across Melbourne, on Wellington Street and Cromwell Street in Collingwood, and George Street and Brunswick Street in Fitzroy.

As of February 2020, there were 1000 students enrolled at Collarts, studying both online and on-campus.[3]

Acquisition

In 2017, Collarts acquired the Mercer School of Interior Design, in order to expand further into the creative arts education industry.[4] The merger coincided with the introduction of two courses: Music Production and Content Creation.[5]

Accreditation

  • Registered Higher Education Provider
  • Registered Training Organisation[6]
  • Accredited by the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA)[7]
  • Accredited by the Australian Skills Quality Authority (ASQA)
  • Registered on the Commonwealth Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students (CRICOS)[8]
  • Member of the Australian Council of Private Education and Training (ACPET)[9]
  • Nationally recognised under the Australian Qualifications Framework

Courses

Collarts offers undergraduate courses in:[10]

Bachelor degrees are offered in Trimesters, and are completed within 2 years at a full time study load.[11]

Starting in the 3rd Trimester, 2019, Collarts will begin offering their Diploma and Bachelor degrees in Dramatic Arts (Comedy). The course is recognised under the Australian Qualifications Framework, accredited until 28 March 2026.[12]

Notable Staff

gollark: https://i.redd.it/mgijbl3kvmh61.jpg
gollark: It would be neat and also horribly abusable if you could do it remotely with some kind of directed speaker/microphone thing.
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/499712972466290688/810135955331350548/20210213_171056.jpg?width=704&height=422
gollark: No, those use pentagons and hexagons.
gollark: I'm DEFINITELY not paid by pizza companies to have ANY subliminal pizza advertising, actually.

References

  1. "RTO Report - Australian College of the Arts". Training.gov.au.
  2. "VETIS". Collarts.
  3. Internal Student Data, June 2019
  4. Ogier, Melissa (March 28, 2017). "TGW Q+A: Patrick Price, Head of Content Creation, Collarts". The Garb Wire.
  5. Guppy, Sarah (23 March 2017). "Collarts acquires Mercer school of interior design and launches two new higher education courses". Art News Portal.
  6. "Organisation Details - 0109 - Australian College of the Arts Pty Ltd". Training.gov.au.
  7. "TEQSA National Registry - Australian College of the Arts Pty Ltd". Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency.
  8. "Institution Details - Australian College of the Arts". Australian Government Department of Education and Training (Cricos).
  9. "Collarts (Australian College of the Arts) - RTO #0109". ACPET Member Catalogue.
  10. "List of courses offered by the Institution". CRICOS - Australian Government Department of Education and Training.
  11. "About Collarts". Collarts.
  12. "Comedy Course Overview". Collarts.
  13. "About Music Business Education". The Biz.
  14. "Collarts launches two new higher education courses in content creation and music production". Australian Music Scene. 3 April 2017.
  15. Birkin, Jim. "Jon Toogood – Shihad 'Still Riding the Dragon'". Wall of Sound.
  16. "Debasement - People". Debasement.
  17. "Renowned Publicist To Take Up Teaching Post At Australian College Of The Arts". The Music. 8 April 2015.

Australian College of the Arts

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.