|
|
Lexikon auf Ihrer Homepage |
|
Lexikon als Lesezeichen hinzufügen |
Das New College of the Humanities ist eine 2010 von A. C. Grayling gegründete Privatuniversität in London.
Richard Dawkins und einige andere der bekanntesten Professoren Englands gründeten 2010 eine Privatuniversität. Diese soll mit den britischen Elite-Hochschulen Cambridge und Oxford in Konkurrenz treten.
Für Studiengebühren in Höhe von 18.000 Pfund jährlich, werden den Studenten ähnlich dem Konzept der US-amerikanischen Liberal Arts Colleges mit geisteswissenschaftlicher Rundumbildung Einzeltutorien geboten.
Die Leitung des College wird Grayling vorerst selbst übernehmen. Professoren sind neben Dawkins und Grayling Simon Blackburn, Partha Dasgupta, Ronald Dworkin, Lawrence Krauss, Steve Jones, Christopher Ricks und Adrian Zuckerman. Hinzu kommen als Gastprofessoren Niall Ferguson, David Cannadine, Linda Colley, Steven Pinker und Peter Singer.
University of London: Birkbeck | Central School of Speech and Drama | Courtauld Institute of Art | Goldsmiths | Heythrop College | Imperial College London | Institute of Cancer Research | Institute of Education | King’s College London | London Business School | London School of Economics and Political Science | London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine | Queen Mary | Royal Academy of Music | Royal Holloway | Royal Veterinary College | St George’s | School of Oriental and African Studies | School of Pharmacy | University College London — University of London Institute in Paris | School of Advanced Study | University Marine Biological Station Millport
University of the Arts London: Camberwell College of Arts | Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design | Chelsea College of Art and Design | London College of Communication | London College of Fashion | Wimbledon College of Art
Übriges London: Brunel | City University London | London Metropolitan University | London South Bank University | Middlesex | New College of the Humanities | Royal College of Art | Royal College of Music | East London
Übriges England: Anglia Ruskin | Aston | Bath | Bath Spa | Bedfordshire | Birmingham | Birmingham City | Bolton | Bournemouth | Bradford | Brighton | Bristol | Buckingham | Buckinghamshire New | Cambridge | Canterbury Christ Church | Central Lancashire | Chester | Chichester | Coventry | Cranfield | Creative Arts | Cumbria | De Montfort | Derby | Durham | East Anglia | Edge Hill | Essex | Exeter | Gloucestershire | Greenwich | Hertfordshire | Huddersfield | Hull | Imperial | Kent | Keele | Kingston | Lancaster | Leeds | Leeds Metropolitan | Leicester | Lincoln | Liverpool | Liverpool Hope | Liverpool John Moores | Loughborough | Manchester | Manchester Metropolitan | Newcastle | Northampton | Northumbria | Nottingham | Nottingham Trent | Oxford | Oxford Brookes | Plymouth | Portsmouth | Reading | Roehampton | Salford | Sheffield | Sheffield Hallam | Southampton | Southampton Solent | Staffordshire | Sunderland | Surrey | Sussex | Teesside | Thames Valley | Warwick | UWE | Westminster | Winchester | Wolverhampton | Worcester | York | York St John
Schottland: Aberdeen | Abertay | Dundee | Edinburgh | Edinburgh Napier | Glasgow | Glasgow Caledonian | Heriot-Watt | Queen Margaret | Robert Gordon | RSAMD | St Andrews | Stirling | Strathclyde | West of Scotland
Wales: University of Wales (Bangor, Glyndŵr, Lampeter, Newport, Swansea, Swansea Metropolitan, Trinity, UWIC) | Aberystwyth | Cardiff | Glamorgan
University Colleges: Birmingham | Bishop Grosseteste | Falmouth | Harper Adams | Irish Baptist College | Marjon | Newman | Norwich | St. Mary’s (Belfast) | St. Mary’s (Twickenham) | Stranmillis