College meaning of the word

Not to be confused with Collage.

A college (Latin: collegium) is an educational institution or a constituent part of one. A college may be a degree-awarding tertiary educational institution, a part of a collegiate or federal university, an institution offering vocational education, or a secondary school.

In most of the world, a college may be a high school or secondary school, a college of further education, a training institution that awards trade qualifications, a higher-education provider that does not have university status (often without its own degree-awarding powers), or a constituent part of a university. In the United States, a college may offer undergraduate programs – either as an independent institution or as the undergraduate program of a university – or it may be a residential college of a university or a community college, referring to (primarily public) higher education institutions that aim to provide affordable and accessible education, usually limited to two-year associate degrees.[1] The word is generally also used as a synonym for a university in the US.[2] Colleges in countries such as France, Belgium, and Switzerland provide secondary education.

Etymology[edit]

The «red siminar», a college building pictured in the coat of arms of Nuuk,[3] the capital city of Greenland

The word «college» is from the Latin verb lego, legere, legi, lectum, «to collect, gather together, pick», plus the preposition cum, «with»,[4] thus meaning «selected together». Thus «colleagues» are literally «persons who have been selected to work together». In ancient Rome a collegium was a «body, guild, corporation united in colleagueship; of magistrates, praetors, tribunes, priests, augurs; a political club or trade guild».[5] Thus a college was a form of corporation or corporate body, an artificial legal person (body/corpus) with its own legal personality, with the capacity to enter into legal contracts, to sue and be sued. In mediaeval England there were colleges of priests, for example in chantry chapels; modern survivals include the Royal College of Surgeons in England (originally the Guild of Surgeons Within the City of London), the College of Arms in London (a body of heralds enforcing heraldic law), an electoral college (to elect representatives), etc., all groups of persons «selected in common» to perform a specified function and appointed by a monarch, founder or other person in authority. As for the modern «college of education», it was a body created for that purpose, for example Eton College was founded in 1440 by letters patent of King Henry VI for the constitution of a college of Fellows, priests, clerks, choristers, poor scholars, and old poor men, with one master or governor, whose duty it shall be to instruct these scholars and any others who may resort thither from any part of England in the knowledge of letters, and especially of grammar, without payment».[6]

Overview[edit]

Higher education[edit]

Within higher education, the term can be used to refer to:[7]

  • A constituent part of a collegiate university, for example King’s College, Cambridge, or of a federal university, for example King’s College London.
  • A liberal arts college, an independent institution of higher education focusing on undergraduate education, such as Williams College or Amherst College.
  • A liberal arts division of a university whose undergraduate program does not otherwise follow a liberal arts model, such as the Yuanpei College at Peking University.
  • An institute providing specialised training, such as a college of further education, for example Belfast Metropolitan College, a teacher training college, or an art college.
  • In the United States, college is sometimes but rarely a synonym for a research university, such as Dartmouth College, one of the eight universities in the Ivy League.
  • In the United States, the undergraduate college of a university which also confers graduate degrees, such as Yale College, the undergraduate college within Yale University.

Further education[edit]

A sixth form college or college of further education is an educational institution in England, Wales, Northern Ireland, Belize, the Caribbean, Malta, Norway, Brunei, or Southern Africa, among others, where students aged 16 to 19 typically study for advanced school-level qualifications, such as A-levels, BTEC, HND or its equivalent and the International Baccalaureate Diploma, or school-level qualifications such as GCSEs. In Singapore and India, this is known as a junior college. The municipal government of the city of Paris uses the phrase «sixth form college» as the English name for a lycée.[8]

Secondary education[edit]

In some national education systems, secondary schools may be called «colleges» or have «college» as part of their title.

In Australia the term «college» is applied to any private or independent (non-government) primary and, especially, secondary school as distinct from a state school. Melbourne Grammar School, Cranbrook School, Sydney and The King’s School, Parramatta are considered colleges.

There has also been a recent trend to rename or create government secondary schools as «colleges». In the state of Victoria, some state high schools are referred to as secondary colleges, although the pre-eminent government secondary school for boys in Melbourne is still named Melbourne High School. In Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory, «college» is used in the name of all state high schools built since the late 1990s, and also some older ones. In New South Wales, some high schools, especially multi-campus schools resulting from mergers, are known as «secondary colleges». In Queensland some newer schools which accept primary and high school students are styled state college, but state schools offering only secondary education are called «State High School». In Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory, «college» refers to the final two years of high school (years 11 and 12), and the institutions which provide this. In this context, «college» is a system independent of the other years of high school. Here, the expression is a shorter version of matriculation college.

In a number of Canadian cities, many government-run secondary schools are called «collegiates» or «collegiate institutes» (C.I.), a complicated form of the word «college» which avoids the usual «post-secondary» connotation. This is because these secondary schools have traditionally focused on academic, rather than vocational, subjects and ability levels (for example, collegiates offered Latin while vocational schools offered technical courses). Some private secondary schools (such as Upper Canada College, Vancouver College) choose to use the word «college» in their names nevertheless.[9] Some secondary schools elsewhere in the country, particularly ones within the separate school system, may also use the word «college» or «collegiate» in their names.[10]

In New Zealand the word «college» normally refers to a secondary school for ages 13 to 17 and «college» appears as part of the name especially of private or integrated schools. «Colleges» most frequently appear in the North Island, whereas «high schools» are more common in the South Island.

In the Netherlands, «college» is equivalent to HBO (Higher professional education). It is oriented towards professional training with clear occupational outlook, unlike universities which are scientifically oriented.[11]

In South Africa, some secondary schools, especially private schools on the English public school model, have «college» in their title. Thus no less than six of South Africa’s Elite Seven high schools call themselves «college» and fit this description. A typical example of this category would be St John’s College.

Private schools that specialize in improving children’s marks through intensive focus on examination needs are informally called «cram-colleges».

In Sri Lanka the word «college» (known as Vidyalaya in Sinhala) normally refers to a secondary school, which usually signifies above the 5th standard. During the British colonial period a limited number of exclusive secondary schools were established based on English public school model (Royal College Colombo, S. Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia, Trinity College, Kandy) these along with several Catholic schools (St. Joseph’s College, Colombo, St Anthony’s College) traditionally carry their name as colleges. Following the start of free education in 1931 large group of central colleges were established to educate the rural masses. Since Sri Lanka gained Independence in 1948, many schools that have been established have been named as «college».[citation needed]

Other[edit]

As well as an educational institution, the term, in accordance with its etymology, may also refer to any formal group of colleagues set up under statute or regulation; often under a Royal Charter. Examples include an electoral college, the College of Arms, a college of canons, and the College of Cardinals. Other collegiate bodies include professional associations, particularly in medicine and allied professions. In the UK these include the Royal College of Nursing and the Royal College of Physicians. Examples in the United States include the American College of Physicians, the American College of Surgeons, and the American College of Dentists. An example in Australia is the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners.

College by country[edit]

The different ways in which the term «College» is used to describe educational institutions in various regions of the world is listed below:

Americas[edit]

Canada[edit]

In Canadian English, the term «college» usually refers to a trades school, applied arts/science/technology/business/health school or community college. These are post-secondary institutions granting certificates, diplomas, associate degrees and (in some cases) bachelor’s degrees. The French acronym specific to public institutions within Quebec’s particular system of pre-university and technical education is CEGEP (Collège d’enseignement général et professionnel, «college of general and professional education»). They are collegiate-level institutions that a student typically enrols in if they wish to continue onto university in the Quebec education system,[note 1] or to learn a trade. In Ontario and Alberta, there are also institutions that are designated university colleges, which only grant undergraduate degrees. This is to differentiate between universities, which have both undergraduate and graduate programs and those that do not.

In Canada, there is a strong distinction between «college» and «university». In conversation, one specifically would say either «they are going to university» (i.e., studying for a three- or four-year degree at a university) or «they are going to college» (i.e., studying at a technical/career training).[12]

Usage in a university setting[edit]

The term college also applies to distinct entities that formally act as an affiliated institution of the university, formally referred to as federated college, or affiliated colleges. A university may also formally include several constituent colleges, forming a collegiate university. Examples of collegiate universities in Canada include Trent University, and the University of Toronto. These types of institutions act independently, maintaining their own endowments, and properties. However, they remain either affiliated, or federated with the overarching university, with the overarching university being the institution that formally grants the degrees. For example, Trinity College was once an independent institution, but later became federated with the University of Toronto. Several centralized universities in Canada have mimicked the collegiate university model; although constituent colleges in a centralized university remains under the authority of the central administration. Centralized universities that have adopted the collegiate model to a degree includes the University of British Columbia, with Green College and St. John’s College; and the Memorial University of Newfoundland, with Sir Wilfred Grenfell College.

Occasionally, «college» refers to a subject specific faculty within a university that, while distinct, are neither federated nor affiliated—College of Education, College of Medicine, College of Dentistry, College of Biological Science[13] among others.

The Royal Military College of Canada is a military college which trains officers for the Canadian Armed Forces. The institution is a full-fledged university, with the authority to issue graduate degrees, although it continues to word the term college in its name. The institution’s sister schools, Royal Military College Saint-Jean also uses the term college in its name, although it academic offering is akin to a CEGEP institution in Quebec. A number of post-secondary art schools in Canada formerly used the word college in their names, despite formally being universities. However, most of these institutions were renamed, or re-branded in the early 21st century, omitting the word college from its name.

Usage in secondary education[edit]

The word college continues to be used in the names public separate secondary schools in Ontario.[14] A number of independent schools across Canada also use the word college in its name.[15]

Public secular school boards in Ontario also refer to their secondary schools as collegiate institutes. However, usage of the word collegiate institute varies between school boards. Collegiate institute is the predominant name for secondary schools in Lakehead District School Board, and Toronto District School Board, although most school boards in Ontario use collegiate institute alongside high school, and secondary school in the names of their institutions. Similarly, secondary schools in Regina, and Saskatoon are referred to as Collegiate.

Chile[edit]

In Chile, the term «college» is usually used in the name of some bilingual schools, like Santiago College, Saint George’s College etc.
Since 2009 the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile incorporated college as a bachelor’s degree, it has a Bachelor of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, a Bachelor of Social Science and a Bachelor of Arts and Humanities. It has the same system as the American universities, it combines majors and minors. And it let the students continue a higher degree in the same university once finished.

United States[edit]

In the United States, there were 5,916 post-secondary institutions (universities and colleges) as of 2020–21, having peaked at 7,253 in 2012–13 and fallen every year since.[16] A «college» in the US can refer to a constituent part of a university (which can be a residential college, the sub-division of the university offering undergraduate courses, or a school of the university offering particular specialized courses), an independent institution offering bachelor’s-level courses, or an institution offering instruction in a particular professional, technical or vocational field.[17] In popular usage, the word «college» is the generic term for any post-secondary undergraduate education. Americans «go to college» after high school, regardless of whether the specific institution is formally a college or a university. Some students choose to dual-enroll, by taking college classes while still in high school. The word and its derivatives are the standard terms used to describe the institutions and experiences associated with American post-secondary undergraduate education.

Students must pay for college before taking classes. Some borrow the money via loans, and some students fund their educations with cash, scholarships, grants, or some combination of these payment methods. In 2011, the state or federal government subsidized $8,000 to $100,000 for each undergraduate degree. For state-owned schools (called «public» universities), the subsidy was given to the college, with the student benefiting from lower tuition.[18][19] The state subsidized on average 50% of public university tuition.[20]

Colleges vary in terms of size, degree, and length of stay. Two-year colleges, also known as junior or community colleges, usually offer an associate degree, and four-year colleges usually offer a bachelor’s degree. Often, these are entirely undergraduate institutions, although some have graduate school programs.

Four-year institutions in the U.S. that emphasize a liberal arts curriculum are known as liberal arts colleges. Until the 20th century, liberal arts, law, medicine, theology, and divinity were about the only form of higher education available in the United States.[21] These schools have traditionally emphasized instruction at the undergraduate level, although advanced research may still occur at these institutions.

While there is no national standard in the United States, the term «university» primarily designates institutions that provide undergraduate and graduate education. A university typically has as its core and its largest internal division an undergraduate college teaching a liberal arts curriculum, also culminating in a bachelor’s degree. What often distinguishes a university is having, in addition, one or more graduate schools engaged in both teaching graduate classes and in research. Often these would be called a School of Law or School of Medicine, (but may also be called a college of law, or a faculty of law). An exception is Vincennes University, Indiana, which is styled and chartered as a «university» even though almost all of its academic programs lead only to two-year associate degrees. Some institutions, such as Dartmouth College and The College of William & Mary, have retained the term «college» in their names for historical reasons. In one unique case, Boston College and Boston University, the former located in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts and the latter located in Boston, Massachusetts, are completely separate institutions.

Usage of the terms varies among the states. In 1996, for example, Georgia changed all of its four-year institutions previously designated as colleges to universities, and all of its vocational technology schools to technical colleges.

The terms «university» and «college» do not exhaust all possible titles for an American institution of higher education. Other options include «institute» (Worcester Polytechnic Institute and Massachusetts Institute of Technology), «academy» (United States Military Academy), «union» (Cooper Union), «conservatory» (New England Conservatory), and «school» (Juilliard School). In colloquial use, they are still referred to as «college» when referring to their undergraduate studies.

The term college is also, as in the United Kingdom, used for a constituent semi-autonomous part of a larger university but generally organized on academic rather than residential lines. For example, at many institutions, the undergraduate portion of the university can be briefly referred to as the college (such as The College of the University of Chicago, Harvard College at Harvard, or Columbia College at Columbia) while at others, such as the University of California, Berkeley, «colleges» are collections of academic programs and other units that share some common characteristics, mission, or disciplinary focus (the «college of engineering», the «college of nursing», and so forth). There exist other variants for historical reasons, including some uses that exist because of mergers and acquisitions; for example, Duke University, which was called Trinity College until the 1920s, still calls its main undergraduate subdivision Trinity College of Arts and Sciences.

Residential colleges[edit]

Some American universities, such as Princeton, Rice, and Yale have established residential colleges (sometimes, as at Harvard, the first to establish such a system in the 1930s, known as houses) along the lines of Oxford or Cambridge.[22] Unlike the Oxbridge colleges, but similarly to Durham, these residential colleges are not autonomous legal entities nor are they typically much involved in education itself, being primarily concerned with room, board, and social life.[23] At the University of Michigan, University of California, San Diego and the University of California, Santa Cruz, each residential college teaches its own core writing courses and has its own distinctive set of graduation requirements.

Many U.S. universities have placed increased emphasis on their residential colleges in recent years. This is exemplified by the creation of new colleges at Ivy League schools such as Yale University[24] and Princeton University,[25] and efforts to strengthen the contribution of the residential colleges to student education, including through a 2016 taskforce at Princeton on residential colleges.[26]

Origin of the U.S. usage[edit]

The founders of the first institutions of higher education in the United States were graduates of the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge. The small institutions they founded would not have seemed to them like universities – they were tiny and did not offer the higher degrees in medicine and theology. Furthermore, they were not composed of several small colleges. Instead, the new institutions felt like the Oxford and Cambridge colleges they were used to – small communities, housing and feeding their students, with instruction from residential tutors (as in the United Kingdom, described above). When the first students graduated, these «colleges» assumed the right to confer degrees upon them, usually with authority—for example, The College of William & Mary has a royal charter from the British monarchy allowing it to confer degrees while Dartmouth College has a charter permitting it to award degrees «as are usually granted in either of the universities, or any other college in our realm of Great Britain.»

The leaders of Harvard College (which granted America’s first degrees in 1642) might have thought of their college as the first of many residential colleges that would grow up into a New Cambridge university. However, over time, few new colleges were founded there, and Harvard grew and added higher faculties. Eventually, it changed its title to university, but the term «college» had stuck and «colleges» have arisen across the United States.

In U.S. usage, the word «college» not only embodies a particular type of school, but has historically been used to refer to the general concept of higher education when it is not necessary to specify a school, as in «going to college» or «college savings accounts» offered by banks.

In a survey of more than 2,000 college students in 33 states and 156 different campuses, the U.S. Public Interest Research Group found the average student spends as much as $1,200 each year on textbooks and supplies alone. By comparison, the group says that’s the equivalent of 39 percent of tuition and fees at a community college, and 14 percent of tuition and fees at a four-year public university.[27]

Morrill Land-Grant Act[edit]

In addition to private colleges and universities, the U.S. also has a system of government funded, public universities. Many were founded under the Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act of 1862. A movement had arisen to bring a form of more practical higher education to the masses, as «…many politicians and educators wanted to make it possible for all young Americans to receive some sort of advanced education.»[28] The Morrill Act «…made it possible for the new western states to establish colleges for the citizens.»[28] Its goal was to make higher education more easily accessible to the citizenry of the country, specifically to improve agricultural systems by providing training and scholarship in the production and sales of agricultural products,[29] and to provide formal education in «…agriculture, home economics, mechanical arts, and other professions that seemed practical at the time.»[28]

The act was eventually extended to allow all states that had remained with the Union during the American Civil War, and eventually all states, to establish such institutions. Most of the colleges established under the Morrill Act have since become full universities, and some are among the elite of the world.

Benefits of college[edit]

Selection of a four-year college as compared to a two-year junior college, even by marginal students such as those with a C+ grade average in high school and SAT scores in the mid 800s, increases the probability of graduation and confers substantial economic and social benefits.[30][31][32]

Asia[edit]

Bangladesh[edit]

In Bangladesh, educational institutions offering higher secondary (11th–12th grade) education are known as colleges.[33]

Hong Kong[edit]

In Hong Kong, the term ‘college’ is used by tertiary institutions as either part of their names or to refer to a constituent part of the university, such as the colleges in the collegiate The Chinese University of Hong Kong; or to a residence hall of a university, such as St. John’s College, University of Hong Kong. Many older secondary schools have the term ‘college’ as part of their names.

India[edit]

The modern system of education was heavily influenced by the British starting in 1835.[34]

In India, the term «college» is commonly reserved for institutions that offer high school diplomas at year 12 («Junior College«, similar to American high schools), and those that offer the bachelor’s degree; some colleges, however, offer programmes up to PhD level. Generally, colleges are located in different parts of a state and all of them are affiliated to a regional university. The colleges offer programmes leading to degrees of that university. Colleges may be either Autonomous or non-autonomous. Autonomous Colleges are empowered to establish their own syllabus, and conduct and assess their own examinations; in non-autonomous colleges, examinations are conducted by the university, at the same time for all colleges under its affiliation. There are several hundred universities and each university has affiliated colleges, often a large number.

The first liberal arts and sciences college in India was «Cottayam College» or the «Syrian College», Kerala in 1815. The First inter linguistic residential education institution in Asia was started at this college. At present it is a Theological seminary which is popularly known as Orthodox Theological Seminary or Old Seminary. After that, CMS College, Kottayam, established in 1817, and the Presidency College, Kolkata, also 1817, initially known as Hindu College. The first college for the study of Christian theology and ecumenical enquiry was Serampore College (1818). The first Missionary institution to impart Western style education in India was the Scottish Church College, Calcutta (1830). The first commerce and economics college in India was Sydenham College, Mumbai (1913).

In India a new term has been introduced that is Autonomous Institutes & Colleges. An autonomous Colleges are colleges which need to be affiliated to a certain university. These colleges can conduct their own admission procedure, examination syllabus, fees structure etc. However, at the end of course completion, they cannot issue their own degree or diploma. The final degree or diploma is issued by the affiliated university.
Also, some significant changes can pave way under the NEP (New Education Policy 2020) which may affect the present guidelines for universities and colleges.[35]

Israel[edit]

In Israel, any non-university higher-learning facility is called a college. Institutions accredited by the Council for Higher Education in Israel (CHE) to confer a bachelor’s degree are called «Academic Colleges» (Hebrew: מִכְלָלָה, romanized: Mikhlala; plural Hebrew: מכללות, romanized: Mikhlalot). These colleges (at least 4 for 2012) may also offer master’s degrees and act as Research facilities. There are also over twenty teacher training colleges or seminaries, most of which may award only a Bachelor of Education (BEd) degree.

  • Academic colleges: Any educational facility that had been approved to offer at least bachelor’s degree is entitled by CHE to use the term academic college in its name.[36]
  • Engineering academic college: Any academic facility that offer at least bachelor’s degree and most of it faculties are providing an Engineering degree and Engineering license.
  • Educational academic college: After an educational facility that had been approved for «Teachers seminar» status is then approved to provide a Bachelor of Education, its name is changed to include «Educational Academic college.»
  • Technical college: A «Technical college» (מכללה טכנולוגית) is an educational facility that is approved to allow to provide P.E degree (הנדסאי) (14’th class) or technician (טכנאי) (13’th class) diploma and licenses.
  • Training College: A «Training College» (מכללה להכשרה or מכללה מקצועית) is an educational facility that provides basic training allowing a person to receive a working permit in a field such as alternative medicine, cooking, Art, Mechanical, Electrical and other professions. A trainee could receive the right to work in certain professions as apprentice (j. mechanic, j. Electrician etc.). After working in the training field for enough time an apprentice could have a license to operate (Mechanic, Electrician[37]). This educational facility is mostly used to provide basic training for low tech jobs and for job seekers without any training that are provided by the nation’s Employment Service (שירות התעסוקה).

Macau[edit]

Following the Portuguese usage, the term «college» (colégio) in Macau has traditionally been used in the names for private (and non-governmental) pre-university educational institutions, which correspond to form one to form six level tiers. Such schools are usually run by the Roman Catholic church or missionaries in Macau. Examples include Chan Sui Ki Perpetual Help College, Yuet Wah College, and Sacred Heart Canossian College.

Philippines[edit]

In the Philippines, colleges usually refer to institutions of learning that grant degrees but whose scholastic fields are not as diverse as that of a university (University of Santo Tomas, University of the Philippines, Ateneo de Manila University, De La Salle University, Far Eastern University, and AMA University), such as the San Beda College which specializes in law, AMA Computer College whose campuses are spread all over the Philippines which specializes in information and computing technologies, and the Mapúa Institute of Technology which specializes in engineering, or to component units within universities that do not grant degrees but rather facilitate the instruction of a particular field, such as a College of Science and College of Engineering, among many other colleges of the University of the Philippines.

A state college may not have the word «college» on its name, but may have several component colleges, or departments. Thus, the Eulogio Amang Rodriguez Institute of Science and Technology is a state college by classification.

Usually, the term «college» is also thought of as a hierarchical demarcation between the term «university», and quite a number of colleges seek to be recognized as universities as a sign of improvement in academic standards (Colegio de San Juan de Letran, San Beda College), and increase in the diversity of the offered degree programs (called «courses»). For private colleges, this may be done through a survey and evaluation by the Commission on Higher Education and accrediting organizations, as was the case of Urios College which is now the Fr. Saturnino Urios University. For state colleges, it is usually done by a legislation by the Congress or Senate. In common usage, «going to college» simply means attending school for an undergraduate degree, whether it’s from an institution recognized as a college or a university.

When it comes to referring to the level of education, college is the term more used to be synonymous to tertiary or higher education. A student who is or has studied his/her undergraduate degree at either an institution with college or university in its name is considered to be going to or have gone to college.

Singapore[edit]

The term «college» in Singapore is generally only used for pre-university educational institutions called «Junior Colleges», which provide the final two years of secondary education (equivalent to sixth form in British terms or grades 11–12 in the American system). Since 1 January 2005, the term also refers to the three campuses of the Institute of Technical Education with the introduction of the «collegiate system», in which the three institutions are called ITE College East, ITE College Central, and ITE College West respectively.

The term «university» is used to describe higher-education institutions offering locally conferred degrees. Institutions offering diplomas are called «polytechnics», while other institutions are often referred to as «institutes» and so forth.

Sri Lanka[edit]

There are several professional and vocational institutions that offer post-secondary education without granting degrees that are referred to as «colleges». This includes the Sri Lanka Law College, the many Technical Colleges and Teaching Colleges.

Turkey[edit]

In Turkey, the term «kolej» (college) refers to a private high school, typically preceded by one year of preparatory language education. Notable Turkish colleges include Robert College, Uskudar American Academy, American Collegiate Institute and Tarsus American College.

Africa[edit]

South Africa[edit]

Although the term «college» is hardly used in any context at any university in South Africa, some non-university tertiary institutions call themselves colleges. These include teacher training colleges, business colleges and wildlife management colleges. See: List of universities in South Africa#Private colleges and universities; List of post secondary institutions in South Africa.

Zimbabwe[edit]

The term college is mainly used by private or independent secondary schools with Advanced Level (Upper 6th formers) and also Polytechnic Colleges which confer diplomas only. A student can complete secondary education (International General Certificate of Secondary Education, IGCSE) at 16 years and proceed straight to a poly-technical college or they can proceed to Advanced level (16 to 19 years) and obtain a General Certificate of Education (GCE) certificate which enables them to enroll at a university, provided they have good grades. Alternatively, with lower grades, the GCE certificate holders will have an added advantage over their GCSE counterparts if they choose to enroll at a polytechnical college. Some schools in Zimbabwe choose to offer the International Baccalaureate studies as an alternative to the IGCSE and GCE.

Europe[edit]

Greece[edit]

Kollegio (in Greek Κολλέγιο) refers to the Centers of Post-Lyceum Education (in Greek Κέντρο Μεταλυκειακής Εκπαίδευσης, abbreviated as KEME), which are principally private and belong to the Greek post-secondary education system. Some of them have links to EU or US higher education institutions or accreditation organizations, such as the NEASC.[38] Kollegio (or Kollegia in plural) may also refer to private non-tertiary schools, such as the Athens College.

Ireland[edit]

In Ireland the term «college» is normally used to describe an institution of tertiary education. University students often say they attend «college» rather than «university». Until 1989, no university provided teaching or research directly; they were formally offered by a constituent college of the university.

There are number of secondary education institutions that traditionally used the word «college» in their names: these are either older, private schools (such as Belvedere College, Gonzaga College, Castleknock College, and St. Michael’s College) or what were formerly a particular kind of secondary school. These secondary schools, formerly known as «technical colleges,» were renamed «community colleges,» but remain secondary schools.

The country’s only ancient university is the University of Dublin. Created during the reign of Elizabeth I, it is modelled on the collegiate universities of Cambridge and Oxford. However, only one constituent college was ever founded, hence the curious position of Trinity College Dublin today; although both are usually considered one and the same, the university and college are completely distinct corporate entities with separate and parallel governing structures.

Among more modern foundations, the National University of Ireland, founded in 1908, consisted of constituent colleges and recognised colleges until 1997. The former are now referred to as constituent universities – institutions that are essentially universities in their own right. The National University can trace its existence back to 1850 and the creation of the Queen’s University of Ireland and the creation of the Catholic University of Ireland in 1854. From 1880, the degree awarding roles of these two universities was taken over by the Royal University of Ireland, which remained until the creation of the National University in 1908 and Queen’s University Belfast.

The state’s two new universities, Dublin City University and University of Limerick, were initially National Institute for Higher Education institutions. These institutions offered university level academic degrees and research from the start of their existence and were awarded university status in 1989 in recognition of this.

Third level technical education in the state has been carried out in the Institutes of Technology, which were established from the 1970s as Regional Technical Colleges. These institutions have delegated authority which entitles them to give degrees and diplomas from Quality and Qualifications Ireland (QQI) in their own names.

A number of private colleges exist such as Dublin Business School, providing undergraduate and postgraduate courses validated by QQI and in some cases by other universities.

Other types of college include colleges of education, such as the Church of Ireland College of Education. These are specialist institutions, often linked to a university, which provide both undergraduate and postgraduate academic degrees for people who want to train as teachers.

A number of state-funded further education colleges exist – which offer vocational education and training in a range of areas from business studies and information and communications technology to sports injury therapy. These courses are usually one, two or less often three years in duration and are validated by QQI at Levels 5 or 6, or for the BTEC Higher National Diploma award, which is a Level 6/7 qualification, validated by Edexcel. There are numerous private colleges (particularly in Dublin and Limerick)[39] which offer both further and higher education qualifications. These degrees and diplomas are often certified by foreign universities/international awarding bodies and are aligned to the National Framework of Qualifications at Levels 6, 7 and 8.

Netherlands[edit]

In the Netherlands there are 3 main educational routes after high school.

  • MBO (middle-level applied education), which is the equivalent of junior college. Designed to prepare students for either skilled trades and technical occupations and workers in support roles in professions such as engineering, accountancy, business administration, nursing, medicine, architecture, and criminology or for additional education at another college with more advanced academic material.[40]
  • HBO (higher professional education), which is the equivalent of college and has a professional orientation. After HBO (typically 4–6 years), pupils can enroll in a (professional) master’s program (1–2 years) or enter the job market. The HBO is taught in vocational universities (hogescholen), of which there are over 40 in the Netherlands, each of which offers a broad variety of programs, with the exception of some that specialize in arts or agriculture. Note that the hogescholen are not allowed to name themselves university in Dutch. This also stretches to English and therefore HBO institutions are known as universities of applied sciences.[41]
  • WO (Scientific education), which is the equivalent to university level education and has an academic orientation.[41]

HBO graduates can be awarded two titles, which are Baccalaureus (bc.) and Ingenieur (ing.). At a WO institution, many more bachelor’s and master’s titles can be awarded. Bachelor’s degrees: Bachelor of Arts (BA), Bachelor of Science (BSc) and Bachelor of Laws (LLB). Master’s degrees: Master of Arts (MA), Master of Laws (LLM) and Master of Science (MSc). The PhD title is a research degree awarded upon completion and defense of a doctoral thesis.[11]

Portugal[edit]

Presently in Portugal, the term colégio (college) is normally used as a generic reference to a private (non-government) school that provides from basic to secondary education. Many of the private schools include the term colégio in their name. Some special public schools – usually of the boarding school type – also include the term in their name, with a notable example being the Colégio Militar (Military College). The term colégio interno (literally «internal college») is used specifically as a generic reference to a boarding school.

Until the 19th century, a colégio was usually a secondary or pre-university school, of public or religious nature, where the students usually lived together. A model for these colleges was the Royal College of Arts and Humanities, founded in Coimbra by King John III of Portugal in 1542.

United Kingdom[edit]

Secondary education and further education[edit]

Further education (FE) colleges and sixth form colleges are institutions providing further education to students over 16. Some of these also provide higher education courses (see below).[42] In the context of secondary education, ‘college’ is used in the names of some private schools, e.g. Eton College and Winchester College.

Higher education[edit]

In higher education, a college is normally a provider that does not hold university status, although it can also refer to a constituent part of a collegiate or federal university or a grouping of academic faculties or departments within a university. Traditionally the distinction between colleges and universities was that colleges did not award degrees while universities did, but this is no longer the case with NCG having gained taught degree awarding powers (the same as some universities) on behalf of its colleges,[43] and many of the colleges of the University of London holding full degree awarding powers and being effectively universities. Most colleges, however, do not hold their own degree awarding powers and continue to offer higher education courses that are validated by universities or other institutions that can award degrees.

In England, as of August 2016, over 60% of the higher education providers directly funded by HEFCE (208/340) are sixth-form or further education colleges, often termed colleges of further and higher education, along with 17 colleges of the University of London, one university college, 100 universities, and 14 other providers (six of which use ‘college’ in their name). Overall, this means over two-thirds of state-supported higher education providers in England are colleges of one form or another.[44][45] Many private providers are also called colleges, e.g. the New College of the Humanities and St Patrick’s College, London.

Colleges within universities vary immensely in their responsibilities. The large constituent colleges of the University of London are effectively universities in their own right; colleges in some universities, including those of the University of the Arts London and smaller colleges of the University of London, run their own degree courses but do not award degrees; those at the University of Roehampton provide accommodation and pastoral care as well as delivering the teaching on university courses; those at Oxford and Cambridge deliver some teaching on university courses as well as providing accommodation and pastoral care; and those in Durham, Kent, Lancaster and York provide accommodation and pastoral care but do not normally participate in formal teaching. The legal status of these colleges also varies widely, with University of London colleges being independent corporations and recognised bodies, Oxbridge colleges, colleges of the University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) and some Durham colleges being independent corporations and listed bodies, most Durham colleges being owned by the university but still listed bodies, and those of other collegiate universities not having formal recognition. When applying for undergraduate courses through UCAS, University of London colleges are treated as independent providers, colleges of Oxford, Cambridge, Durham and UHI are treated as locations within the universities that can be selected by specifying a ‘campus code’ in addition to selecting the university, and colleges of other universities are not recognised.[46][47][48][49][50]

The UHI and the University of Wales Trinity Saint David (UWTSD) both include further education colleges. However, while the UHI colleges integrate FE and HE provision, UWTSD maintains a separation between the university campuses (Lampeter, Carmarthen and Swansea) and the two colleges (Coleg Sir Gâr and Coleg Ceredigion; n.b. coleg is Welsh for college), which although part of the same group are treated as separate institutions rather than colleges within the university.[51][52]

A university college is an independent institution with the power to award taught degrees, but which has not been granted university status. University College is a protected title that can only be used with permission, although note that University College London, University College, Oxford and University College, Durham are colleges within their respective universities and not university colleges (in the case of UCL holding full degree awarding powers that set it above a university college), while University College Birmingham is a university in its own right and also not a university college.

Oceania[edit]

Australia[edit]

In Australia a college may be an institution of tertiary education that is smaller than a university, run independently or as part of a university. Following a reform in the 1980s many of the formerly independent colleges now belong to a larger universities.

Referring to parts of a university, there are residential colleges which provide residence for students, both undergraduate and postgraduate, called university colleges. These colleges often provide additional tutorial assistance, and some host theological study. Many colleges have strong traditions and rituals, so are a combination of dormitory style accommodation and fraternity or sorority culture.

Most technical and further education institutions (TAFEs), which offer certificate and diploma vocational courses, are styled «TAFE colleges» or «Colleges of TAFE». In some places, such as Tasmania, college refers to a type of school for Year 11 and 12 students, e.g. Don College.

New Zealand[edit]

The constituent colleges of the former University of New Zealand (such as Canterbury University College) have become independent universities. Some halls of residence associated with New Zealand universities retain the name of «college», particularly at the University of Otago (which although brought under the umbrella of the University of New Zealand, already possessed university status and degree awarding powers). The institutions formerly known as «Teacher-training colleges» now style themselves «College of education».

Some universities, such as the University of Canterbury, have divided their university into constituent administrative «Colleges» – the College of Arts containing departments that teach Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, College of Science containing Science departments, and so on. This is largely modelled on the Cambridge model, discussed above.

Like the United Kingdom some professional bodies in New Zealand style themselves as «colleges», for example, the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, the Royal Australasian College of Physicians.

In some parts of the country, secondary school is often referred to as college and the term is used interchangeably with high school. This sometimes confuses people from other parts of New Zealand. But in all parts of the country many secondary schools have «College» in their name, such as Rangitoto College, New Zealand’s largest secondary.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Exceptions are made for «mature» student, meaning 21 years of age or over, and out of the educational system for at least 2 years.

References[edit]

  1. ^ «Everything You Need to Know About Community Colleges: FAQ». Archived from the original on 28 October 2021. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  2. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, 1891, s.v., definition 4c
  3. ^ «Nuuk — Arms (crest) of Nuuk». www.heraldry-wiki.com. 30 September 2018. Archived from the original on 7 September 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  4. ^ Cassell’s Latin Dictionary, Marchant, J.R.V, & Charles, Joseph F., (Eds.), Revised Edition, 1928: lego; colligo
  5. ^ Cassell’s Latin Dictionary, Marchant, J.R.V, & Charles, Joseph F., (Eds.), Revised Edition, 1928, p.107
  6. ^ Cust, Lionel (7 January 1899). «A history of Eton college». London : Duckworth – via Internet Archive.
  7. ^ «college noun (EDUCATION)». Cambridge Dictionary Online. Archived from the original on 4 September 2011.
  8. ^ «Children & families». City of Paris. Archived from the original on 5 September 2012. Retrieved 20 July 2010.
  9. ^ Private Elementary and Secondary Schools Archived 9 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine search form on the Ministry of Education of Ontario web site—enter «college» in the «name contains» field and check the «secondary» checkbox
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  11. ^ a b «What’s the difference between HBO and WO?». TU Delft. Archived from the original on 28 July 2020. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  12. ^ «College and University in Canada: What Is the Difference?». World Education Services. Archived from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  13. ^ «College of Biological Science». University of Guelph. Archived from the original on 26 June 2010. Retrieved 19 June 2010.
  14. ^ Find a School or School Board Archived 2009-09-08 at the Wayback Machine search form on the Ministry of Education of Ontario web site—click «Secondary» and «Separate»
  15. ^ «Canada Capstone College – Opening hours – 360 Robson Street, Vancouver, British Columbia – Customer Reviews | Canada Online». vancouver.cdncompanies.com. Archived from the original on 11 April 2018. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  16. ^ NCES. «Fast Facts – Educational Institutions». Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  17. ^ «College». Merriam-Webster dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  18. ^ «Taxpayer Subsidies for Most Colleges and Universities Average Between $8,000 to More than $100,000 for Each Bachelor’s Degree, New Study Finds» (Press release). American Institutes for Research. 12 May 2011. Archived from the original on 30 December 2013.
  19. ^ «State Education Subsidies Shift Students to Public Universities». www.nber.org. Archived from the original on 24 September 2017.
  20. ^ Fethke, Gary (1 April 2012). «Why Does Tuition Go Up? Because Taxpayer Support Goes Down». Archived from the original on 20 April 2013 – via The Chronicle of Higher Education.
  21. ^ Masci, David (1998). Should colleges get back to basics?. CQ Researcher. Congressional Quarterly.
  22. ^ Robert J. O’Hara. «Samuel Eliot Morison on the Harvard Houses». The Collegiate Way. Archived from the original on 26 October 2016. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  23. ^ Robert J. O’Hara (8 October 2002). «Collegiate Developments at Durham and Princeton». The Collegiate Way. Archived from the original on 10 January 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2017. The University of Durham is the third oldest collegiate university in Great Britain, and most of Durham’s residential colleges are creatures of the central university rather than legally independent corporations. In this respect, the Durham colleges are closer in structure to the residential colleges that have been established in the United States and elsewhere in recent years than are the independent corporations of Oxford and Cambridge.
  24. ^ «The New Residential Colleges». Yale University. Archived from the original on 6 May 2016.
  25. ^ «Housing & Dining». Princeton University. Archived from the original on 11 May 2016.
  26. ^ «Task Force on the Residential College Model». Planning for Princeton’s Future. Princeton University. Archived from the original on 4 June 2016.
  27. ^ Bidwell, Allie (28 January 2014). «Report: High Textbook Prices Have College Students Struggling». U.S. News. Archived from the original on 27 February 2015.
  28. ^ a b c Lightcap, Brad. «The Morrill Act of 1862». ND.edu. Archived from the original on 8 January 2008.
  29. ^ «A Land-Grant Institution». Dafvm.msstate.edu. 11 August 2009. Archived from the original on 10 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2009.
  30. ^ David Leonhardt (24 April 2015). «College for the Masses» (Upshot blog). The New York Times. Archived from the original on 26 April 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015. Only about a third of young adults today receive a bachelor’s degree. The new research confirms that many more teenagers have the ability to do so—and would benefit from it
  31. ^ Joshua Goodman; Michael Hurwitz; Jonathan Smith (February 2015). «College Access, Initial College Choice and Degree Completion» (PDF). National Bureau of Economic Research. doi:10.3386/w20996. S2CID 168194289. Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 May 2015.
  32. ^ Seth Zimmerman (May 2013). «The Returns to College Admission for Academically Marginal Students» (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015. Students with grades just above a threshold for admissions eligibility at a large public university in Florida are much more likely to attend any university than below-threshold students. The marginal admission yields earnings gains of 22 percent between eight and fourteen years after high school completion. These gains outstrip the costs of college attendance, and are largest for male students and free lunch recipients.
  33. ^ «HSC registration begins June 29, no eligibility tests in colleges». The Financial Express. Archived from the original on 17 July 2021. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
  34. ^ «Influence of modern education on the culture of India». 14 March 2010. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017.
  35. ^ «Autonomous, Deemed, Private, State & Central Universities: Know the Difference | Shiksha». www.shiksha.com. Archived from the original on 16 May 2017. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
  36. ^ «חוק המועצה להשכלה גבוהה» (מל»ג), תשי»ח-1958, רק מוסד להשכלה גבוהה שקיבל את אישור המועצה להשכלה גבוהה יהיה רשאי להשתמש בכינוי «מכללה אקדמית».
  37. ^ תקנות החשמל (רשיונות), התשמ»ה-1985 Archived 9 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ «Search». Colleges & Universities (CIHE) / Commission on Institutions of Higher Education. Archived from the original on 20 March 2018. Retrieved 6 December 2016.
  39. ^ «Private Colleges Dublin». Education in Ireland. Archived from the original on 20 July 2021. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  40. ^ Ministerie van Onderwijs, Cultuur en Wetenschap (16 December 2011). «Secondary vocational education (MBO) — Secondary vocational education (MBO) and higher education — Government.nl». www.government.nl. Archived from the original on 29 June 2020. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  41. ^ a b Ministerie van Onderwijs, Cultuur en Wetenschap (16 December 2011). «Higher education — Secondary vocational education (MBO) and higher education — Government.nl». www.government.nl. Archived from the original on 29 June 2020. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  42. ^ «Further education – Colleges and other institutions». Education UK. British Council. Archived from the original on 19 January 2017. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  43. ^ Keiran Southern (29 June 2016). «Newcastle education group to become first in the country to award its own degree courses». ChronicleLive. Archived from the original on 18 September 2016.
  44. ^ «Overview». Register of HE providers. HEFCE. Archived from the original on 3 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  45. ^ «Get the data». Register of HE providers. HEFCE. Archived from the original on 11 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  46. ^ «Search courses». UCAS. Archived from the original on 26 August 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  47. ^ R. J. O’Hara (20 December 2004). «The Collegiate System at the University of Durham». The Collegiate Way. Archived from the original on 6 October 2006. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  48. ^ «The Education (Listed Bodies) (England) Order 2013». Legislation.gov.uk. 27 November 2013. Archived from the original on 31 July 2015.
  49. ^ «The Education (Recognised Bodies) (England) Order 2013». Legislation.gov.uk. 27 November 2013. Archived from the original on 31 August 2016.
  50. ^ «List of institution and campus codes». UCAS. Archived from the original (XLS) on 19 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  51. ^ «About UHI». University of the Highlands and Islands. Archived from the original on 20 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  52. ^ «UWTSD Group». University of Wales Trinity Saint David. Archived from the original on 19 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016.

External links[edit]

See also[edit]

  • Community college
  • Residential college
  • University college
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  • 1
    college

    1) университе́тский ко́лле́дж

    2) специа́льное вы́сшее уче́бное заведе́ние (педагогическое, военное, морское

    и т.п.

    )

    3) привилегиро́ванная ча́стная сре́дняя шко́ла

    4) корпора́ция; колле́гия

    Англо-русский словарь Мюллера > college

  • 2
    college

    Персональный Сократ > college

  • 3
    college

    колледж, специальное высшее учебное заведение; курсы;

    English-Russian military dictionary > college

  • 4
    college

    1. n университетский колледж

    he is a college man — он получил образование в колледже; он человек с университетским образованием

    2. n университет

    3. n факультет университета

    4. n привилегированная самоуправляющаяся средняя школа с интернатом, колледж

    5. n частная средняя школа

    6. n институт, специальное высшее учебное заведение

    7. n колледж, средняя школа

    8. n училище

    9. n амер. арх. специальный курс лекций

    10. n благотворительное заведение, существующее на пожертвования

    11. n корпорация; коллегия

    sacred college — «священная коллегия», коллегия кардиналов

    12. n сл. тюрьма

    община духовных лиц, живущая на пожертвования

    13. n арх. компания; группа

    Синонимический ряд:

    1. academy (noun) academy; conservatory; institute; polytechnic; university

    3. area (noun) area; department; discipline; field

    4. educational institution (noun) boarding school; educational institution; elementary school; high school; junior high school; middle school; primary school; school; seminary

    English-Russian base dictionary > college

  • 5
    college

    [ˈkɔlɪdʒ]

    business college коммерческий колледж college коллегия college колледж college корпорация; коллегия college корпорация college специальное высшее учебное заведение (педагогическое, военное, морское и т. п.) college средняя школа с интернатом college жарг. тюрьма college университет (США) college амер. университет college университетский колледж college университетский колледж (Великобритания) college училище college факультет университета (США) college частная средняя школа commercial college коммерческий колледж electoral college коллегия выборщиков electoral: college college амер. коллегия выборщиков (избираемых в штатах для выборов президента и вице-президента) military college военный колледж teachers college педагогический институт training college педагогический институт training college профессиональное училище

    English-Russian short dictionary > college

  • 6
    college

    колледж; амер. университет; специальное высшее учебное заведение; институт

    Англо-русский словарь по экономике и финансам > college

  • 7
    college

    [ʹkɒlıdʒ]

    1. 1) университетский колледж ()

    he is a college man — он получил образование в колледже; он человек с университетским образованием

    2) университет ()

    3) факультет университета ()

    2. 1) привилегированная самоуправляющаяся средняя школа с интернатом (), колледж

    Eton college — школа в Итоне, Итонский колледж

    2) частная средняя школа

    3. институт, специальное высшее учебное заведение ()

    4. колледж, средняя школа ()

    5. училище

    6.

    арх. специальный курс лекций ()

    7. благотворительное (учебное) заведение, существующее на пожертвования

    8. корпорация; коллегия

    10.

    община духовных лиц, живущая на пожертвования

    НБАРС > college

  • 8
    college

    [‘kɔlɪdʒ]

    n

    колледж, институт

    engineering college


    — enter college
    — go to college
    — graduate from college
    — be at a medical college

    USAGE:

    (1.) Если существительное college имеет описательное определение, то оно употребляется с неопределенным артиклем: a medical (an engineering) college медицинский (технический) институт. Во всех остальных случаях артикль перед существительным college не употребляется: to go (to be at) college учиться в колледже; to graduate from college окончить колледж (институт). (2.) See school, n

    English-Russian combinatory dictionary > college

  • 9
    college

    сущ.

    1)

    общ.

    корпорация; коллегия

    See:

    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > college

  • 10
    college

    Politics english-russian dictionary > college

  • 11
    college

    ˈkɔlɪdʒ сущ.
    1) корпорация, коллегия College of Physicians ≈ корпорация врачей electoral college ≈ коллегия выборщиков Syn: guild, fellowship, association
    2) ист. церковная община, живущая на пожертвования
    3) университетский колледж residential college ≈ колледж, предоставляющий общежитие senior college ≈ колледж высшей ступени
    4) амер. университет( обыкн. небольшой с единым учебным планом;
    для крупных учебных заведений употребляется термин university) ;
    факультет университета
    5) специальное высшее учебное заведение( педагогическое, военное, морское и т. п.) Royal Naval College ≈ Военно-морской колледж Великобритании
    6) средняя школа с интернатом, колледж
    7) сл. тюрьма
    8) компания, группа Syn: company, group
    университетский колледж (в Великобритании) — he is a * man он получил образование в колледже;
    он человек с университетским образованием — * sports спортивная жизнь в высших учебных заведениях университет (в США) факультет университета (в США) привилегированная самоуправляющаяся средняя школа с интернатом (независимая от правительства), колледж — Eton * школа в Итоне, Итонский колледж частная средняя школа институт, специальное высшее учебное заведение( военное, морское, сельскохозяйственное) — medical * медицинский колледж — teachers’ training * педагогический институт колледж, средняя школа (во Франции) училище — barber’s * училище парикмахеров (американизм) (устаревшее) специальный курс лекций (для получения степени) благотворительное (учебное) заведение, существующее на пожертвования корпорация;
    коллегия — C. of Surgeons корпорация хирургов — electoral * коллегия выборщиков — C. of Cardinals( церковное) коллегия кардиналов, конклав( для избрания папы) (сленг) тюрьма (историческое) община духовных лиц, живущая на пожертвования ( устаревшее) компания;
    группа — a * of bees рой пчел
    business ~ коммерческий колледж
    college коллегия ~ колледж ~ корпорация;
    коллегия ~ корпорация ~ специальное высшее учебное заведение (педагогическое, военное, морское и т. п.) ~ средняя школа с интернатом ~ жарг. тюрьма ~ университет (США) ~ амер. университет ~ университетский колледж ~ университетский колледж (Великобритания) ~ училище ~ факультет университета (США) ~ частная средняя школа
    commercial ~ коммерческий колледж
    electoral ~ коллегия выборщиков electoral: ~ college амер. коллегия выборщиков (избираемых в штатах для выборов президента и вице-президента)
    military ~ военный колледж
    teachers ~ педагогический институт
    training ~ педагогический институт training ~ профессиональное училище

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > college

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    college

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    college

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    college

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    college

    [‘kɔlɪʤ]

    сущ.

    5) средняя школа с интернатом, колледж

    6) корпорация, коллегия

    Syn:

    7)

    ист.

    церковная община, живущая на пожертвования

    Syn:

    Англо-русский современный словарь > college

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    college

    English-Russian big medical dictionary > college

  • 18
    college

    [‘kɔlɪʤ]

    n

    1) колледж, специальное высшее учебное заведение с интернатом

    2) факультет университета, университетский колледж

    3) коллегия, корпорация

    2000 самых употребительных английских слов > college

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    college

    English-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > college

  • 20
    college

    airline college

    flying college

    flying-training college

    Авиасловарь > college

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См. также в других словарях:

  • College — • The word college, from the Latin collegium, originally signified a community, a corporation, an organized society, a body of colleagues, or a society of persons engaged in some common pursuit Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. College… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • collège — [ kɔlɛʒ ] n. m. • 1308; lat. collegium « groupement, confrérie », de collega → collègue 1 ♦ Corps de personnes revêtues d une même dignité, de fonctions sacrées. Antiq. Le collège des augures. Mod. Collège de chanoines (chapitre). Collège… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • College — Collège Collège de Keighley, West Yorkshire, Royaume Uni Un collège peut désigner un groupe de personnes partageant une même caractéristique ou un établissement d enseignement. Sommaire 1 O …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Collége — Collège Collège de Keighley, West Yorkshire, Royaume Uni Un collège peut désigner un groupe de personnes partageant une même caractéristique ou un établissement d enseignement. Sommaire 1 O …   Wikipédia en Français

  • college — COLLEGE. s. m. (On pron. Colége.) Certain Corps ou Compagnie de personnes notables qui sont en même dignité. Le Collége des Cardinaux, ou le Sacré Collége. Le Collége des Electeurs, des Princes, des Villes de l Empire. Le Collége des Secrétaires… …   Dictionnaire de l’Académie Française 1798

  • college — COLLEGE. s. m. Certain Corps ou Compagnie de personnes notables qui sont de mesme dignité. Illustre College. celebre College. le Sacré College des Cardinaux, ou absolument, le Sacré College. le College des Electeurs, des Princes, des Villes de l… …   Dictionnaire de l’Académie française

  • College — Col lege, n. [F. coll[ e]ge, L. collegium, fr. collega colleague. See {Colleague}.] 1. A collection, body, or society of persons engaged in common pursuits, or having common duties and interests, and sometimes, by charter, peculiar rights and… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • college — has many long established meanings: (1) a body of officials, membership of which is a privilege or honour, e.g. College of Cardinals, College of Arms, College of Physicians, etc., (2) an establishment for further education, normally part of a… …   Modern English usage

  • college — {{/stl 13}}{{stl 7}}[wym. koledż] {{/stl 7}}{{stl 8}}rz. mnż III, D. collegege u; lm D. collegege ów {{/stl 8}}{{stl 20}} {{/stl 20}}{{stl 12}}1. {{/stl 12}}{{stl 7}} w USA: samodzielna szkoła wyższa działająca przy uniwersytecie lub należąca do… …   Langenscheidt Polski wyjaśnień

  • college — [käl′ij] n. [ME & OFr < L collegium, community, society, guild, fraternity < collega: see COLLEAGUE] 1. an association of individuals having certain powers and duties, and engaged in some common pursuit [the electoral college] 2. [orig.… …   English World dictionary

  • College — College; college; in·ter·college; sub·college; …   English syllables

Word COLLEGE
Character 7
Hyphenation col lege
Pronunciations N/A

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What do we mean by college?

An institution of higher learning that grants the bachelor’s degree in liberal arts or science or both. noun

An undergraduate division or school of a university offering courses and granting degrees in a particular field or group of fields. noun

A junior or community college. noun

A school offering special instruction in a professional or technical subject. noun

The students, faculty, and administration of one of these schools or institutions. noun

The building, buildings, or grounds where one of these schools or institutions is located. noun

A self-governing society of scholars for study or instruction, incorporated within a university. noun

An institution for secondary education in France and certain other countries that is not supported by the state. noun

A body of persons having a common purpose or shared duties. noun

An electoral college. noun

A body of clerics living together on an endowment. noun

An organized association of men, invested with certain common powers and rights, performing certain related duties, or engaged in some common employment or pursuit; a body of colleagues; a guild; a corporation; a community: as, an ancient Roman college of priests; the college of cardinals; the Heralds’ College in England; a college of physicians or surgeons. noun

An endowed and incorporated community or association of students within a university. See university. noun

The institution or house founded for the accommodation of such an association. noun

In Scotland, the United States, and Canada, an incorporated and endowed institution of learning of the highest grade. noun

A school or an academy of a high grade or of high pretensions. noun

An edifice occupied by a college. noun

In France, an institution for secondary education, controlled by the municipality, which pays for the instruction given there, and differing from the lyceum in that the latter is supported and directed by the state. The curriculum is nearly the same in both, the college being usually modeled on the lyceum. noun

A corporate group; a group of colleagues.

(in some proper nouns) A group sharing common purposes or goals.

An electoral college.

An academic institution.

A specialized division of a university.

An institution of higher education teaching undergraduates.

A university.

Attendance at an institution of higher education.

A postsecondary institution that offers vocational training and/or associate’s degrees.

A non-specialized, semi-autonomous division of a university, with its own faculty, departments, library, etc.

An institution of further education at an intermediate level; sixth form.

An institution for adult education at a basic or intermediate level (teaching those of any age).

A high school or secondary school.

A private (non-government) primary or high school.

A residential hall associated with a university, possibly having its own tutors.

A government high school, short for junior college.

(in Chile) A bilingual school.

1. Just like high school, but harder, and more expensive. 4 (or more) years of wasting your parents money and learning shit that you wont remember once you start working.
2. Hell Urban Dictionary

A forty thousand dollar bar tab Urban Dictionary

A magical place where it is rumored that learning takes place, although to those who enter it is often described differently afterward, as a beatiful land in which beer flows in amber currents next to a golden pasture, where virgins lie naked with gentle smiles upon their calm, inviting faces; but more precisely, a Shangri-La rite of passage into adulthood which involves rampant consumption of alcoholic beverages, flagrant and promiscuous sexual behavior, and a general and fundamental disregard for any form of responsibility by its habitants. Urban Dictionary

The place where you enter inexorbitant amounts of debt to «learn» things you will never apply once to your actual occupation. Basically, an expensive 4-year waiting period for a paper called «degree». Urban Dictionary

Where dreamers can go to secure a plan B for their future employment prospects Urban Dictionary

An alternative to buying a Ferrari (they cost about the same). Urban Dictionary

A $20,000 cover charge for 18-21 year olds Urban Dictionary

1. High school redirected in a very expensive facility, concentrated with thousands of other crazy drunks, potheads, nerds, and hopeful virgins. It’s the center where young adults feel free to do as they wish considering booze, drugs and sex are beknowngst parents, and only until holiday vacations are when their precious sons and daughters come home clean and sober (most of the time). It’s the namesake of a heavily financial burden and longterm debt paid by the attendee soon after they (hopefully) graduate.
2. The Real World meets Animal House. Urban Dictionary

An expensive daycare center Urban Dictionary

Supposedly the best years of your life. More accurately, a hellhole that knows no mercy and loves to beat you down and make you feel worthless. (See UC Berkeley) Urban Dictionary

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Actually, music gave me the support when I needed it. I would never have gone to college unless I’d gotten a piano scholarship. And now I’m so glad I got to learn to play the cello, which is a different experience, you’re flexing a different muscle, but it’s beautiful because it is music.

Jamie Foxx

section

ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD COLLEGE

From Latin collēgium company, society, band of associates, from collēga.

info

Etymology is the study of the origin of words and their changes in structure and significance.

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section

PRONUNCIATION OF COLLEGE

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GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF COLLEGE

College is a noun.

A noun is a type of word the meaning of which determines reality. Nouns provide the names for all things: people, objects, sensations, feelings, etc.

WHAT DOES COLLEGE MEAN IN ENGLISH?

college

College

A college is an educational institution or a constituent part of one. Usage of the word college varies in English-speaking nations. A college may be a degree-awarding tertiary educational institution, a part of a collegiate university, or an institution offering vocational education. In the United States, «college» formally refers to a constituent part of a university, but generally «college» and «university» are used interchangeably, whereas in Ireland, the UK, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, Hong Kong and other former and present Commonwealth nations, «college» may refer to a secondary or high school, a college of further education, a training institution that awards trade qualifications, or a constituent part of a university.


Definition of college in the English dictionary

The first definition of college in the dictionary is an institution of higher education; part of a university. Other definition of college is a school or an institution providing specialized courses or teaching. College is also the building or buildings in which a college is housed.

WORDS THAT RHYME WITH COLLEGE

Synonyms and antonyms of college in the English dictionary of synonyms

Translation of «college» into 25 languages

online translator

TRANSLATION OF COLLEGE

Find out the translation of college to 25 languages with our English multilingual translator.

The translations of college from English to other languages presented in this section have been obtained through automatic statistical translation; where the essential translation unit is the word «college» in English.

Translator English — Chinese


学院

1,325 millions of speakers

Translator English — Spanish


universidad

570 millions of speakers

English


college

510 millions of speakers

Translator English — Hindi


कॉलेज

380 millions of speakers

Translator English — Arabic


كُلِّيَّة

280 millions of speakers

Translator English — Russian


колледж

278 millions of speakers

Translator English — Portuguese


colégio

270 millions of speakers

Translator English — Bengali


কলেজ

260 millions of speakers

Translator English — French


faculté

220 millions of speakers

Translator English — Malay


Kolej

190 millions of speakers

Translator English — German


College

180 millions of speakers

Translator English — Japanese


カレッジ

130 millions of speakers

Translator English — Korean


대학

85 millions of speakers

Translator English — Javanese


College

85 millions of speakers

Translator English — Vietnamese


trường cao đẳng

80 millions of speakers

Translator English — Tamil


கல்லூரி

75 millions of speakers

Translator English — Marathi


कॉलेज

75 millions of speakers

Translator English — Turkish


kolej

70 millions of speakers

Translator English — Italian


università

65 millions of speakers

Translator English — Polish


uczelnia

50 millions of speakers

Translator English — Ukrainian


коледж

40 millions of speakers

Translator English — Romanian


colegiu

30 millions of speakers

Translator English — Greek


κολέγιο

15 millions of speakers

Translator English — Afrikaans


Kollege

14 millions of speakers

Translator English — Swedish


läroanstalt

10 millions of speakers

Translator English — Norwegian


college

5 millions of speakers

Trends of use of college

TENDENCIES OF USE OF THE TERM «COLLEGE»

The term «college» is very widely used and occupies the 1.189 position in our list of most widely used terms in the English dictionary.

Trends

FREQUENCY

Very widely used

The map shown above gives the frequency of use of the term «college» in the different countries.

Principal search tendencies and common uses of college

List of principal searches undertaken by users to access our English online dictionary and most widely used expressions with the word «college».

FREQUENCY OF USE OF THE TERM «COLLEGE» OVER TIME

The graph expresses the annual evolution of the frequency of use of the word «college» during the past 500 years. Its implementation is based on analysing how often the term «college» appears in digitalised printed sources in English between the year 1500 and the present day.

Examples of use in the English literature, quotes and news about college

10 QUOTES WITH «COLLEGE»

Famous quotes and sentences with the word college.

I learned law so well, the day I graduated I sued the college, won the case, and got my tuition back.

Like anyone who goes to college, you’re leaving a familiar surrounding and a comfortable environment and your friends and everything, and you’re starting fresh. It can be pretty daunting.

I played baseball in college but I didn’t identify with the jocks, I was in my own little world .

After college, rather than pursue real work, I joined a folk group and sang in coffee houses and nightclubs, an occupation that does little for the intellect and even less for the complexion.

One of the big concerns I have is that most of the HR departments in a lot of companies are hiring away from creativity and they don’t know it. For instance, they are requiring everybody to have a college degree. The most creative people I know couldn’t deal with college.

I was lucky I went to school in London because the tutors could see what to do. I knew I wanted to do something different. Why would I want to do what other people were already doing, because they would always do it better? I always wanted to work around the body. So throughout my college years, my work was quite free.

We should all feel confident in our intelligence. By the way, intelligence to me isn’t just being book-smart or having a college degree; it’s trusting your gut instincts, being intuitive, thinking outside the box, and sometimes just realizing that things need to change and being smart enough to change it.

How you play the game is for college ball. When you’re playing for money, winning is the only thing that matters.

I was always into fashion because my mom has always been interested in fashion. She majored in fashion merchandising in college, and it’s always been something we have in common.

Actually, music gave me the support when I needed it. I would never have gone to college unless I’d gotten a piano scholarship. And now I’m so glad I got to learn to play the cello, which is a different experience, you’re flexing a different muscle, but it’s beautiful because it is music.

10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «COLLEGE»

Discover the use of college in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to college and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.

1

College: What it Was, Is, and Should Be

In College, prominent cultural critic Andrew Delbanco offers a trenchant defense of such an education, and warns that it is becoming a privilege reserved for the relatively rich.

2

What the Best College Teachers Do

This book, the conclusion of a fifteen-year study of nearly one hundred college teachers in a wide variety of fields and universities, offers valuable answers for all educators.

3

Completing College: Rethinking Institutional Action

Now, with Completing College, Tinto offers administrators a coherent framework with which to develop and implement programs to promote completion.

4

Taming the Electoral College

This book examines the history and weaknesses of the electoral college and proposes reforms that could be made to our electoral process without a constitutional amendment.

Robert William Bennett, 2006

5

College Knowledge: What It Really Takes for Students to …

Praise for College Knowledge Featuring an Updated Introduction for this paperback edition «This is not a book of platitudes and generalities.

6

Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses

Academically Adrift holds sobering lessons for students, faculty, administrators, policy makers, and parents—all of whom are implicated in promoting or at least ignoring contemporary campus culture.

Richard Arum, Josipa Roksa, 2011

7

The American College and University: A History

In his foreword to this new edition, John Thelin assesses the impact that Rudolph’s work has had on higher education studies.

8

Conquering the College Admissions Essay in 10 Steps: …

A much-needed supplement to other college entrance guides, this useful handbook will help students win over the admissions dean, while preparing them to write better papers once they’ve been accepted.

9

College Essays that Made a Difference, 5th Edition

In this 5th edition of College Essays that Made a Difference, you’ll find: • 114 real essays written by 90 unique college hopefuls applying to Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, Yale, MIT, and other top schools—along with each …

10

College Study Skills: Becoming a Strategic Learner

The text incorporates active learning strategies to help students succeed in college by introducing a strategy, allowing them to practice it, and having them do self-assessments to gain feedback on their own success.

10 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «COLLEGE»

Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term college is used in the context of the following news items.

Martin O’Malley Calls For Debt-Free College Within 5 Years

Democratic presidential candidate Martin O’Malley on Wednesday will lay out a plan providing debt-free access to a college degree for all … «Huffington Post, Jul 15»

Best in College Sports: Ohio State, L’ville, UCLA lead 2014-15 …

Virginia catapulted itself to the top of the college baseball world, winning the national title one year after finishing as a runner-up to Vanderbilt. «CBSSports.com, Jul 15»

Lawmakers Ready Bill To Make Obama’s Free Community College

WASHINGTON — Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) and Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.) will introduce legislation Wednesday to make community college … «Huffington Post, Jul 15»

College for students living with disabilities

PAUL, Minn.— When Rachel Larson was born 21 years ago, her mother LouAnn never dreamed she’d someday send off her little girl to college. «KARE, Jul 15»

Study: More than a third of US college students transferred

BOSTON (AP) — More than a third of college students who started in 2008 transferred to another school, according to a new national study, … «NorthJersey.com, Jul 15»

Oregon Will Become Second State to Offer Free Community College

Mark Hass (D-Beaverton), is that a lot of needy students who might like to attend community college are currently failing to apply for federal … «Willamette Week, Jul 15»

York College adds to their faculty and staff

YORK — York College has added two to their faculty and staff team for the upcoming fall semester. Lindsey Eckert will join the faculty this fall as … «York News-Times, Jul 15»

In midst of lawsuit, Muscatine Community College students launch …

Muscatine Community College students and recent graduates are launching a new publication after they say administrators attempted to … «The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines, Jul 15»

Moravian College plans to build a Health Science Building

The college is asking Bethlehem City Council to rezone the block bordered by Main, Durham, Orchard and West Laurel streets from high … «WFMZ Allentown, Jul 15»

‘Yes means yes’ is the law for sex on New York college campuses

He signed new legislation aimed at combating sexual assault on college campuses July 7. (The Associated Press | File photo, 2015). «Syracuse.com, Jul 15»

REFERENCE

« EDUCALINGO. College [online]. Available <https://educalingo.com/en/dic-en/college>. Apr 2023 ».

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Meaning of COLLEGE in English

transcription, транскрипция: [ ˈkɔlɪdʒ ]

n. 1 an establishment for further or higher education, sometimes part of a university. 2 an establishment for specialized professional education (business college; college of music; naval college). 3 the buildings or premises of a college (lived in college). 4 the students and teachers in a college. 5 Brit. a public school. 6 an organized body of persons with shared functions and privileges (College of Physicians). øCollege of Arms (in the UK) a corporation recording lineage and granting arms. college of education Brit. a training college for schoolteachers. college pudding Brit. a small baked or steamed suet pudding with dried fruit. øøcollegial adj. [ME f. OF college or L collegium f. collega (as COLLEAGUE)]


English main colloquial, spoken dictionary.

     Английский основной разговорный словарь.
2012

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