Sydney College of Advanced Education

The Sydney College of Advanced Education was an educational institution in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia that existed from 1981 to 1989. The Commonwealth government announced recommendations for a consolidation of higher education provision in March 1981. This was welcomed by state governments; argued against by individual institutions, but the threatened loss of commonwealth funding dissipated much of this opposition. On 24 July 1981, Sydney College of Advanced Education (CAE) was established as a corporation under the Colleges of Advanced Education Act 1975 by the State Minister of Education.

On the 1 January 1982 The Sydney CAE commenced operation. Participating colleges included: Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education; Guild Teachers College; Nursery School Teachers College; Sydney Kindergarten Teachers College; and, Sydney Teachers College. Institutes formed included: The Institute of Early Childhood Studies (Sydney Kindergarten Teachers College and Nursery School Teachers College); The Institute of Technical and Adult Teacher Education (aka ITATE) (formerly Sydney Teachers College Technical Education School); The City Art Institute (formerly the School of Art in the Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education); The St George Institute of Education (formerly the School of Teacher Education in the Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education); The Sydney Institute of Education (Sydney Teachers College); The Guild Centre (Guild Teachers College), designed for non-government education; not designated an Institute. In late 1984, the Institute of Nursing Studies became the 6th Institute of the Sydney CAE.

The Mansfield Committee Report to the Higher Education Board (1985) following its review of the NSW Advanced Education sector’s provision for education in visual arts and design, responses to its recommendations eventually led to the CAI’s withdrawal from the Sydney CAE. In March 1987, it was announced that, from the start of 1988, the City Art Institute would join the East Sydney Art School and, with those parts of the Sydney College of the Arts not joining the University of Technology, Sydney, would become the NSW Institute of the Arts.

In November 1988 a Council meeting decided to pursue disestablishment through a divestment model. The formal Closing Ceremony was held at the Darling Harbour Convention Centre on 3 November 1989. On 31 December 1989, Sydney CAE ceased to exist as a corporate body. The Constituent Institutes transferred to the four Sydney metropolitan universities. The individual institutes were amalgamated as follows: Sydney Institute of Education (University of Sydney) Institute of Nursing Studies (University of Sydney) Institute of Early Childhood Studies (Macquarie University) St George Institute of Education (University of New South Wales) Institute of Technical and Adult Teacher Education (University of Technology, Sydney)

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    The mode of founding a college is, commonly, to get up a subscription of dollars and cents, and then, following blindly the principles of a division of labor to its extreme,—a principle which should never be followed but with circumspection,—to call in a contractor who makes this a subject of speculation,... and for these oversights successive generations have to pay.
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    ... in the education of women, the cultivation of the understanding is always subordinate to the acquirement of some corporeal accomplishment ...
    Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–1797)