CIFE – The Council For Independent Education
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CIFE is a professional association of English independent
sixth-form In the education systems of England, Northern Ireland, Wales, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago and some other Commonwealth countries, sixth form represents the final two years of secondary education, ages 16 to 18. Pupils typically prepare for A-lev ...
colleges. It provides support to its member institutions and advice about
GCE Advanced Level The A-Level (Advanced Level) is a subject-based qualification conferred as part of the General Certificate of Education, as well as a school leaving qualification offered by the educational bodies in the United Kingdom and the educational aut ...
and university entrance to anyone who asks for it. CIFE's President is
Alistair Cooke, Baron Lexden Alistair Basil Cooke, Baron Lexden, (born 20 April 1945) is a British historian, author and politician who sits as a Conservative life peer in the House of Lords. Lord Lexden has been official historian of the Conservative Party since 2 ...


History

CIFE began in 1973, as the Conference for Independent Further Education. Independent Further Education was a catch-all term which described fee-paying institutions which, though they taught the final stages of a pre-university curriculum, did not include enough pupils younger than 16 to be classified as a school. In 1973 the
Department for Education The Department for Education (DfE) is a department of His Majesty's Government responsible for child protection, child services, education (compulsory, further and higher education), apprenticeships and wider skills in England. A Department ...
decided that it was no longer willing to inspect such ‘educational establishments’, leaving that sector of education provision unchecked. CIFE was founded by a group of colleges which felt that some form of inspection was essential to provide help to the public in choosing safely and avoiding rogues. In the absence of ‘official’ inspection CIFE set up its own independent inspectorate to visit member colleges, to promote best practice and to deal with any failings. CIFE retained its own inspectorate until the
British Accreditation Council The British Accreditation Council (BAC), also known as The British Accreditation Council for Independent Further and Higher Education, is an educational accreditation agency recognised by the British Government for international students entering ...
was founded in 1984, with assistance from the Nuffield Foundation. The BAC provided a comprehensive inspection scheme for all types of independent college, whether they prepared students for university entrance or for more vocational courses. Since 1984 CIFE's role has emphasised the provision of professional support to its member colleges, particularly in collective marketing, and in providing an advice service to the public to help with questions about courses, university entrance etc.


Founding colleges

The founding members of CIFE were a diverse group of colleges. Some, like Davies Laing and Dick, were London-based ‘ crammers’, direct descendants of old-fashioned colleges which emphasised no-frills exam preparation, while others, like Stake Farm and Kirby Lodge, were small boarding schools which placed more emphasis on ‘finishing’ than on exam results. What they all had in common was an emphasis on small-group teaching of students aged 16 or more. Those first CIFE members were: *Pax Hill Education Centre *Stafford House Tutorial College *Birmingham Tutorial College *Kirby Lodge *Greylands *St Clare's Hall *Basil Paterson College *Concord College *Modern Tutorial College (now Bales College) *Davies's Hove *Davies's London *Cambridge Tutors (now Cambridge Tutors College) *Davies Laing and Dick (now DLD College) *Queen's Gate Palace Tutors *Padworth *Wood Tutorial College Since that time the face of Further education has changed considerably. Exams are different, and university entrance is an almost universal aim rather than the reserve of the very academic. Regulation, though providing a safeguard against incompetent practice, has made it less easy for small innovative colleges to survive, and a number of those early members have disappeared (Kirby Lodge, Greylands College for instance). Over the past 25 years new colleges have started and old ones have diversified. Some such as
Concord Concord may refer to: Meaning "agreement" * Pact or treaty, frequently between nations (indicating a condition of harmony) * Harmony, in music * Agreement (linguistics), a change in the form of a word depending on grammatical features of other ...
and Padworth have become mainstream schools, and others have specialised (for instance St Clare's which now teaches IB courses, and Basil Paterson which is now an EFL college). Bales and Cambridge Tutors are still CIFE members. Stafford House is now known as CATS Canterbury and now teaches IB as well as A level and has won awards from the TES and Independent Schools Association (see ISA and TES websites). The ‘finishing school’ has gone, and ‘cramming’ evolved into a ‘liberal’ small group teaching format with an emphasis on individual attention and exam technique which has proved both attractive and successful not just within CIFE colleges but in a much wider range of schools: sixth-form teaching in most independent schools is now much closer to the CIFE-college model than was the case in the 1970s and '80s. Crammers became tutorial colleges and now ‘independent sixth-form colleges’. CIFE colleges have also been pathfinders in opening up overseas markets with courses tailored towards university entrance. The recruitment of pre-university students from Malaysia, Vietnam and China was pioneered by CIFE colleges.


Current nature of CIFE colleges

Some colleges now cater primarily for students from abroad while others deal mainly with British citizens. Some have several hundred students, some fewer than 50. Some are primarily residential while others deal mostly with ‘day’ students. Some remain colleges which primarily prepare for exams but others provide a more complete environment for development. All teach in small groups with an emphasis on adapting to the individual rather than requiring conformity to a school ethos.


Distinctive nature of independent sixth-form colleges

Although mainstream independent schools have become more flexible and student-centred over the years, independent sixth-form colleges retain a range of distinctive qualities: *Because most of their students are 16+, their staff have special expertise in sixth-form teaching and exam preparation *They generally offer a wide range of subjects – over 30 A levels is very common, and they offer timetables with few (if any) restrictions on subject combinations *Most offer specialist courses in addition to A-levels over two years: **one-year A-level and GCSE, **exam retake, **final-year A-level, **university foundation **Easter revision **English as second language *Students tend to be treated as young adults rather than children


Inspection

The Department of Education eventually resumed inspection of independent sixth-form colleges in 2004. It is currently a requirement of membership that CIFE colleges undergo regular inspection by the BAC, or Ofsted or the Independent Schools Inspectorate


Current CIFE members

In July 2020 the following were CIFE members *
Ashbourne College Ashbourne College is a private school and sixth form located in Kensington, London, England. Ashbourne was founded in 1981 by its current principal Michael Kirby. The college offers A-level and GCSE courses in a coeducational environment and it ...
*Bath Academy *Bales College *
Bosworth Independent College Bosworth Independent School is a private co-educational boarding school, located in Northampton Northampton () is a market town and civil parish in the East Midlands of England, on the River Nene, north-west of London and south-east of ...
*Brooke House Colleg e * Cambridge Tutors College *
Carfax College Carfax College, previously known as Carfax Tutorial Establishment is a registered independent school in England, specializing in providing one-to-one and very-small-group tuition in all academic subjects to pupils of all ages. It is an exami ...
, Oxford *CATS College London *CATS College Cambridge *CATS College Canterbury *Cherwell College Oxford *
Collingham College Collingham College is an independent, co-educational school, founded as Collingham Tutors in 1975, by Old Etonian John Marsden and Nicholas Browne. Collingham is situated in London's Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. It is directly betwe ...
*
David Game College David Game College is an independent school and sixth form based in Tower Hill, London. The college is coeducational and admits students between the ages of 13–22. Up to 400 students take full-time courses each year. The college is associated ...
*LSI College * MPW Birmingham * MPW Cambridge * MPW London * Oxford International College *Oxford Sixth-form College (was Oxford Tutorial College) *Padworth College *Regent College * Rochester Independent College *Westminster Tutors


References


External links


CIFE website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cife - The Council For Independent Education Private school organisations in England Private school organisations in the United Kingdom