Holborn College
Kaplan Holborn College was a college of higher education in London, England specialising in accounting, finance, law and business.
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It was originally established as Holborn Law College in 1969 to prepare young lawyers from overseas for the University of London International Programme - and then Wolverhampton University External - LLB exams and received the Queen's Award for Export Achievement in 1982 for its role in international education. For a short time it was based at 200, Greyhound Road in Fulham, where it offered part-time courses for England & Wales Solicitors' Finals as well as certificated courses in individual degree-level law subjects.
The best-known course, with the largest proportion nationwide of successful students, was the old-style English Bar Examination (also known as Bar Finals) for British Commonwealth and US exemptions-seeking Bar students (approx. 70% of the intake) as well as for UK Intending Non-Practitioners (approx. 30% of the cohort) until the exam was phased out in 2000. The loss of the well-subscribed part- and full-time courses deprived the college of a vital source of revenue. The College thereafter received no Bar Council validation to run the new, unified Practitioners' Bar Vocational Course (BVC), which required audio-recording studio-facilities for training in practical advocacy, conference and negotiation skills.
The school then moved to a site along the A206 (Woolwich Road), close to the Thames Barrier, in Charlton Riverside in South-East London. The building of 1894-96 had been previously used by Maryon Park School and had been extended twice, first in 1909–10, then in 1914-15.[1]
In 2005 the college became part of Kaplan Inc., one of the largest international private education providers. Kaplan every year provided education and training to a million students across 30 countries. In March 2013, the college rebranded from "Holborn College" to "Kaplan Holborn College". Kaplan Holborn College specialised in law and business, offering foundation, undergraduate, top-up and postgraduate courses in association with leading UK universities such as Anglia Ruskin University and the University of the West of England.
The college had a diverse mix of students from the UK and the rest of the world, in particular from Africa, China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, the Caribbean and Eastern Europe. There was no on-site accommodation provision for students under 18; most students stayed in two nearby hostels or with host families.[2] Three- and four-year undergraduate degrees last cost £5,995 per annum. Two-year degrees were charged at £9,000. In 2012 the Woolwich Road premises were acquired by Greenwich Council and turned into a primary school.[1] The college continued at Borough High Street. Kaplan Holborn College had received a commendable outcome from the QAA in June 2013.[3] However, in September 2015 Kaplan Holborn College closed its Borough High Street campus.[4]
The old school building at Woolwich Road is now used by Windrush Primary School. On the adjacent former playgrounds of this school new buildings were constructed for the short-lived Royal Greenwich University Technical College, which opened in 2013. In 2016 this became Royal Greenwich Trust School.
References
- Saint & Guillery, The Survey of London vol. 48: Woolwich, page 127. Yale, 2012 (online PDF, pp. 55-57).
- Holborn College - Ofsted Reports, 16 November 2004.
- Kaplan Holborn College June 2013 QAA Review
- Kaplan to shut Borough High Street’s Holborn College on london-se1.co.uk, 30 April 2015.