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In 1841 he began giving lectures in Edinburgh's extramural school on botany with some success.
It highlights our many academic, intramural and extramural school based activities; parent involvement; and school initiatives.
In 1831-2, with Allen Thomson, who taught physiology, he gave a first course of lectures on systematic anatomy in the extramural school in Edinburgh.
He managed, however, to complete his medical education in the extramural school of the university and in 1832 received the diploma of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.
He graduated top in his class, and was handpicked by the even more famous Dr. Knox to teach anatomy at his extramural school at i o Surgeons' Square, Edinburgh.
He then joined the extramural school of anatomy to act as demonstrator where he took part in the lecture-room course of demonstrations on regional anatomy, as well as in the dissecting-room teaching.
Robert Knox, the conservator of the Museum who organised and catalogued the Bell and Barclay collections, had established himself as a very successful teacher of anatomy in the extramural school in Surgeon Square.
She studied at the Edinburgh Association for the University Education of Women, and then at University College, Aberystwyth, and at the extramural School of Medicine for Women, Edinburgh.
Fairfield and her two sisters entered the George Watson's Ladies College, after which Fairfield was accepted into the Edinburgh Medical College for Women, an extramural school for the University of Edinburgh.
He was also appointed in 1863 a lecturer on the principles of surgery in the extramural school of medicine, and gave there a course of lectures yearly until 1871, when he began to lecture on clinical surgery at the Royal Infirmary.
Following the transformation of the Extramural School of Engineering in Radom into the Kielce-Radom Extramural School of Engineering in Kielce, the Faculty of Tanning became one of its divisions.
John Barclay, a successful anatomy demonstrator in the extramural school of medicine donated his collection, while Sir Charles Bell, Professor of Surgery in the University of London and latterly in the University of Edinburgh sold his collection to the museum.
John Bell (1763-1820), a successful teacher of anatomy in his own extramural school and an accomplished Edinburgh surgeon (but not related to Benjamin Bell), failed to gain appointment to the Infirmary rota, and began to campaign against what he saw as the injustice of the rota system.