| | |
| Established | 1878 |
|---|---|
| Director | Dr Alison MacDonald (Interim) |
Academic staff | 90 |
| Students | c. 15,000 enrollees per year |
| Location | Oxford , England |
| Affiliations | University of Oxford |
| Website | www |
| | |
| |
The Department for Continuing Education, branded as Oxford Lifelong Learning, is a constitute department of the University of Oxford in Oxford, England, United Kingdom. It provides a range of courses and qualifications mainly for part-time and mature students.
Prior to acquiring its current name in 2025, the institution was also known as: [1]
The 19th century saw an awakening social awareness to the needs of working-class people generally, and Oxford University signalled an educational responsibility to the general community by sending lecturers into towns and cities across Victorian England, bringing university education to a diverse adult audience. The University of Oxford was one of the founders, in the late 19th century, of the so-called 'extension' movement, wherein universities began to offer educational opportunities to adult learners outside their traditional student base. [3] The University of Oxford Standing Committee of the Delegacy of Local Examinations was established in 1878. [1] The first of the early "Oxford Extension Lectures" was delivered at the King Edward VI School in Birmingham, in September 1878 by the Reverend Arthur Johnson. [4] By 1893, Oxford University Extension Centres were bringing adult education to much of England and a few cities in Wales. [5]
In 1927 the university purchased Rewley House on Wellington Square in Oxford as the permanent base of what was then known as the "University of Oxford Delegacy for Extra-Mural Studies", and which later was renamed as the Oxford University Department for Continuing Education. [5] During the 1990s Kellogg College was co-located here.[ citation needed ]
In June 2025, the Department for Continuing Education added a brand name "Oxford Lifelong Learning". [2]
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