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Central institution

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A Central Institution (CI) was a type of higher education institute in 20th century Scotland responsible for providing degree-level education but emphasising teaching rather than research. Some had a range of courses similar to polytechnics elsewhere in the United Kingdom while others were more specialised such as the art colleges and the conservatoire. Some subjects were not taught at the Central Institutions, for example teacher training was only carried out by the Colleges of Education which later merged with universities, and sociology was only offered by the universities.

Amongst the most common titles for individual Central Institutions were College of Agriculture, College of Art, and Institute of Technology. Napier College and Glasgow and Paisley Colleges of Technology eventually changed their names to include the word Polytechnic. Another Central Institution, Leith Nautical College, Leith, had been closed in 1987 by merger into the further education sector.

Like the designation polytechnic, the term Central Institution is not currently used since most of these institutions entered the university sector in 1992 when the Further and Higher Education Act 1992 came into effect. Those universities are now sometimes referred to as Scottish centrally-funded colleges or as post-1992 universities.

List of Central Institutions

The number of Central Institutions varied but in 1988 the list included the following, several of which now have university status.

Sources

See also