Apart from its central location in Zagreb, it has facilities in Petrinja and Čakovec.
[2] In the Independent State of Croatia the program was extended to four years, but was shorted to three after the Second World War.
[2] It became the Pedagogical Academy in 1960, and upon Croatian independence the academy gradually evolved into the modern faculty.
[2] According to Croatia's Parliamentary Commission for Verification of War and Post-War Crimes the faculty's grounds in Zagreb were the site of a mass grave of approximately 300 prisoners killed by the Yugoslav Partisans in 1945, after the end of the Second World War.
[3] After a public education campaign in 2008 by concerned groups, Croatian authorities launched an investigation into the site.