Since 2017, the university has provided educational expertise, planning and research, teacher training and professional development to develop CCF’s Education Program – and it continues to create a generation of teachers capable of delivering a world-class education to some of the most disadvantaged children in Cambodia.
To mark the eight-year long partnership, CCF (a non-profit organisation) presented the university with a stunning stone carving – a smaller replica of one in the traditional Angkor-Wat-style, hanging in the entrance of CCF’s high school, the Neeson Cripps Academy (NCA) in Phnom Penh.
The ongoing collaboration, which offers teaching and education staff the opportunity to study for the Postgraduate Certificate in Education International (PGCEi), began with an introduction from Robert Cripps, Vice-President Philanthropy and Art of the Cripps Foundation and long-term CCF supporter. The Cripps Foundation and its affiliates have had an extraordinary impact on the university over many years and are one of the institution’s most generous donors.
What began as a visit in 2017 from the university’s School of Education to the NCA grew into the long-term partnership to develop CCF’s Education Program. And in 2021, the organisation launched its first PGCEi cohort, marking a significant milestone in the professional development of its staff and teachers.
Dr Lucy Cooker, Professor of International Education and Faculty Director of Global Engagement for Social Sciences at the University of Nottingham, who enrolled CCF teachers on the PGCEi course, said: “I put together what has now become a 10-year project in terms of a teacher education plan (for CCF), developing teachers, knowledge and understanding, and building this very rich focus of expertise within the school, which included the PGCEi.”