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University of London now |
The University of London was the
first university to offer distance learning degrees, establishing its External
Program in 1858. The background to this innovation lay in the fact that the
institution (later known as University College London) was non-denominational
and, given the intense religious rivalries at the time, there was an outcry
against the "godless" university. The issue soon boiled down to which
institutions had degree-granting powers and which institutions did not.
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London University late 1880 |
The compromise solution that emerged
in 1836 was that the sole authority to conduct the examinations leading to
degrees would be given to a new officially recognized entity called the
"University of London", which would act as examining body for the
University of London colleges, originally University College London and King's
College London, and award
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London University late 1880 |
their students University of London degrees. As
Sheldon Rothblatt states, "thus arose in nearly archetypal form the famous
English distinction between teaching and examining, here embodied in separate
institutions." With the state giving examining powers to a separate
entity, the groundwork was laid for the creation of a program within the new university
that would both administer examinations and award qualifications to students
taking instruction at another institution or pursuing a course of self-directed
study.
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