Catalogue description Tate Gallery: Education, Tate Britain

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Details of TG 26
Reference: TG 26
Title: Tate Gallery: Education, Tate Britain
Description:

Policy and planning documents, programming documents and evaluations, and project files (e.g. children and families, schools and teachers, community, adult education, multimedia, public), teaching and learning materials and activities e.g. games, activity packs.

Records held at the Tate Gallery are catalogued more fully in its online catalogue. Online descriptions of some individual records in this series can also be viewed on Discovery, The National Archives' online catalogue, see TG 26.

Date: 2000-
Related material:

Some Education photographs may be found in the Tate Gallery Archive Photographs series (TGA PHOTO). Currently these are not catalogued, but pdf lists are available for researchers to view via the Tate archive catalogue: http://archive.tate.org.uk/tgaphotolists/TGAPHOTO9TateExhibitions.pdf.

Separated material:

Historically at Tate photographs have been separated from paper records. Therefore it is possible some Education related photographs may be found in the main Tate Gallery Archive photographs series: http://archive.tate.org.uk/tgaphotolists/TGAPHOTO9TateExhibitions.pdf. although this is more likely with pre-1999 records.

Held by: Tate Gallery Archive, not available at The National Archives
Legal status: Public Record(s)
Language: English
Creator:

Tate Gallery, 1897-

Physical description: file(s)
Physical condition: Some records may contain audio tape/dvd/cd formats
Access conditions: No records held at The National Archives in this departmental code
Custodial history: Once first review is completed the records are transferred directly to the Gallery Records store at Millbank in London.
Accruals: This record series will accrue regularly, year by year.
Administrative / biographical background:

In 2000 the Tate Gallery Education Department at Millbank was restructured into a new Tate Britain Department of Interpretation and Education, and a similar Interpretation and Education Department was created at Tate Modern. In 2007-2008 the education function across all Tate sites was renamed Tate Learning, reflecting wider audiences and signifying a shift in thinking and approach.

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