It is difficult to recommend a film college or course - lecturers change, new courses start, certain courses suddenly get large cash injections, etc. However here are some tips:

research

Research courses thoroughly, take your time and arrange your own visit to places you are interested in and see how they feel to you.

ratios

Check out how many people would be on your course (genuine staff to student ratio) - some courses have literally hundreds of students.

money

Do they have money and do they have kit (on some courses this is not so important, good lecturers can be enough) On a film course you will soon notice if your course is cash-stapped, when you are fighting to book out the last piece of ageing kit from an exhausted technician.

outside scotland

Have you looked outside Scotland? There are many more courses you might be eligible for.

location

If you are going to college, consider the location. If you've been bought up in the city consider a campus college or somewhere with lots of green around. If you live in the middle of nowhere check out courses in the big cities. Being a reasonable distance from home can help you concentrate on your films and studies and be more fun.

weblinks

The BFI with Skillset have put together a lengthy comprehensive list of all courses including short courses. Skillset provides excellent lists and is gradually putting together industry accredited courses. The site for creativeloop has some interesting viewing and the screen academy is another place to research.

And if you are considering college have a look at this youtube clip