Landex – 'Land Based Colleges Aspiring to Excellence' – is a subscriber organisation with 39 member colleges and universities in the United Kingdom.[1] To qualify for membership, a provider must deliver significant volumes of land-based education and training.
Structure
The organisation was formed in 2006 from its predecessor, Napaeo, which was founded in 1950. Landex colleges and universities in England collectively provide over 80% of long specialist land-based further and higher education qualifications, together with a wide range of 14-16 apprenticeship and cost-recovery programmes. Courses delivered by most Landex providers are underpinned by substantial farming and other business enterprises. It is governed by a board of 14 elected principals and vice-chancellors, who agree the organisation's strategic objectives and priorities on behalf of the membership. A number of sub-committees, each chaired by a board member and populated by specialists from within the sector, inform the board's decision making:
- Higher Education
- Further Education Quality & Curriculum
- Finance & Funding
- Learning Materials & Technology.
The staff team is led by chief executive, Chris Moody. Its primary functions are to secure continuous improvement in all its members through peer review, support and CPD; and to promote the interests of members and their various client groups.
Activities
The organisation's activities include:
- Engaging with a range of government departments and agencies to raise the profile and promote the importance of land based education and training.
- Working particularly closely with the funding agencies to ensure that the cost of meeting the specific needs of education and training for the land based industries is reflected in the various funding methodologies.
- Working with the quality assurance agencies to ensure that inspection and audit processes are as effective as possible in improving the quality of both teaching, learning and assessment, and student experience.
- Responding to a wide range of public consultations on behalf of its members.
- Working with industry leaders on the direction and content of the Agriskills Forum strategy “towards a new professionalism”, and continuing to participate actively in the work of this forum, and the various initiatives emanating from it.
- Building on the model of quality improvement Landex completes over 100 site visits to member Colleges annually, spanning well over 150 on-site days in order to provide structured analysis and guidance through peer review and the Landex model of quality improvement.
- Working in partnership with GuildHE and the AoC to ensure that the service it provides meets effectively the needs of specialist land based providers with respect to both further and higher education issues.
- Working closely with the Government officers responsible for policies on ‘Specialist Land based Providers and Weightings’, ‘Discretionary Learner Support Funding’, ‘Residential Bursaries’, and ‘Residential Care Standards Funding’. This provides the opportunity to reinforce the importance of appropriate support for students attending land based courses and to highlight how rurality issues affect students’ ability to participate in land based education and training.
- Providing an extensive range of continuous professional development (CPD) events and conferences each year, often at Landex colleges or universities, and involving a wide range of delegates from Landex member institutions and other providers of specialist land based programmes.
- Providing through its annual conference, the opportunity for members to meet and share good practice, and for national leaders to share emerging policy issues with members.
Landex owns with the University of Northampton, a joint venture company to develop interactive learning materials to support the delivery of land-based programmes both in the UK and overseas.
Between 2014 and 2016, Landex sponsored and funded the development of a National Land Based College as an organisation to help co-ordinate the delivery of continuous professional development for those working in land-based industries.
Members
Full members
- Abingdon and Witney College
- Askham Bryan College (Newton Rigg & York)
- Bedford College, (Shuttleworth)
- Berkshire College of Agriculture
- Bridgwater College (Cannington)
- Brooksby Melton College
- College of Agriculture, Food and Rural Enterprise (Enniskillen, Greenmount, Loughry)
- Capel Manor College
- Chichester College (Brinsbury)
- Coleg Cambria (Llysfasi & Northop)
- College of West Anglia (Milton)
- Cornwall College (Duchy College & Bicton College)
- Craven College
- Derby College (Broomfield Hall)
- East Durham College (Houghall)
- Easton and Otley College (Suffolk & Norfolk)
- Guildford College (Merrist Wood)
- Hadlow College
- Harper Adams University
- Hartpury College
- Herefordshire & Ludlow College
- Kingston Maurward College
- Moulton College
- Myerscough College
- North Shropshire College
- Northumberland College (Kirkley Hall)
- Nottingham Trent University (Brackenhurst)
- Plumpton College
- Reaseheath College
- Royal Agricultural University, Cirencester
- Sparsholt College
- Scotland's Rural College (Aberdeen, Ayr, Barony, Edinburgh, Elmwood, Oatridge)
- University of Lincoln
- Warwickshire College (Moreton Morrell & Pershore)
- Wiltshire College & University Centre (Lackham campus)
- Writtle College
Affiliate members
Associate members
- Coleg Gwent (Usk)
References
External links
- Official website
- napaeo.org.uk, archived in June 2008