The current chair of the board is Roger Lewis.[6] The current dean is James Dalziel,[7] while the deputy dean is Edwina Murphy.[8]
History
The college was established by the 1891 General Synod of the Church of England in Australia and Tasmania.[9][10] The college was founded in order to provide for the "systematic study of divinity", especially among clergy and ordination candidates, there being no realistic opportunities for them to earn a Bachelor of Divinity (BD) degree at English universities and Australian universities refusing to offer theological education.[11][12][13]
The ACT is a national consortium of affiliated colleges with 17 theological and Bible colleges approved to deliver its accredited courses.[14] Around 3,000 individual active students and research candidates, are enrolled in courses each year.[15]
The college became a higher education provider (HEP) under the Higher Education Support Act 2003 (Cth).[16] As a HEP, the ACT administers the FEE-HELP program, by which students enrolled in accredited higher education courses of the ACT may receive a loan for their tuition fees.[17]
As of September 2007, the college is a company limited by guarantee.[18]
In addition, as a HEP under the Higher Education Support Act, the ACT was required to undergo a quality audit conducted by the Australian Universities Quality Agency (AUQA). In November 2006, the college was the first non-self-accrediting HEP to be audited. The AUQA audit report was completed in January 2007 and publicly released on the AUQA website in February 2007.[19][20] The process was repeated in 2011 and the college underwent a Cycle 2 quality audit by AUQA. The report of the audit was publicly released on the website of the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency in March 2012.[21]
In 2010, the college received self-accrediting authority.[22] This means that the college can accredit its own courses in theology and ministry within the scope of the self-accrediting authority specified by the Department of Education and Training in New South Wales.[23]
The college is currently accredited by TEQSA through till 2025.[24]
^McIver, R. (2018). Theological education in Australia: Past and present as possible indicators of future trends. Colloquium: The Australian and New Zealand Theological Review, 50(2), 43-68. Retrieved from https://anzats.edu.au/journal/ 11 July 2023.
^"THE ANGLICAN SYNOD". The Daily Telegraph. No. 3822. New South Wales, Australia. 26 September 1891. p. 6. Retrieved 4 July 2017 – via National Library of Australia.