Kellogg College, Oxford

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Colleges and halls of the University of Oxford
Kellogg College
                                 
College name Kellogg College
Named after Will Keith Kellogg
Established 1990
Sister college None
President Dr Geoffrey Thomas
Undergraduates 350 (total students)
Graduates 350 (total students)
Homepage

Kellogg College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. It focuses on the concept of lifelong learning and mostly caters to part-time mature students, though the full-time student body now numbers fifty three students (September 2005).

Kellogg College was founded with financial assistance from the Kellogg Foundation, and became a full college of the university in 1994, Will Keith Kellogg being recognised as its effective founder.

The College at the moment shares facilities (offices, teaching rooms, library, common rooms, dining room and residential accommodation) at Rewley House in Wellington Square with the Department for Continuing Education (OUDCE). In May 2004, however, the College acquired a site for a new permanent home, located between Banbury Road and Bradmore Road, in the Norham Manor area of North Oxford, a ten minute walk from Wellington Square. The plan is to develop the site over a number of years, with new buildings (lecture room, library, dining rooms) being completed within three years. The existing Victorian buildings have been renovated to provide residential accommodation, offices, and research space. The College offices moved to the Banbury Road site in April, 2006.

In 1878 Arthur Johnson was the first to deliver an Oxford Extension Lecture. This turned into a movement which still flourishes. The movement is now known as the Kellogg College. It caters for about 16,000 part-time students every year.

Kellogg College courtyard, at the centre of Rewley House.
Kellogg College courtyard, at the centre of Rewley House.

The movement grew out of a drive to liberalise Oxford which gained momentum in the 1850s. As a consequence, the University slowly began to open itself to religious nonconformists and poorer men. Later this was extended to include women. It is this movement that forms the historical background of Kellogg College. The extension lectures proved very popular.

The movement is sometimes credited for taking Oxford to the masses. Lectures were given in town halls, public libraries and village school rooms across the country. The aim of the extension movement was twofold: social and political. It aimed at educating the masses for an informed democracy. It was all about citizenship.

The city of Oxford was asked to fund extensions of the university. This proved unpopular and an alternative system was chosen: flying visits by extension lecturers.

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