Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ivy Tech was founded in 1963 as Indiana's Vocational Technical College in order to provide technical and vocational education for various industries. It was rechartered as a system of vocational technical schools in 2005. The name "Ivy Tech" derives from an initialism (I.V. Tech) of the school's original name. The name was officially changed to ...
Registering apprenticeship programs that meet Federal and State standards; Protecting the safety and welfare of apprentices; Issuing nationally recognized and portable Certificates of Completion to apprentices; Promoting the development of new programs through marketing and technical assistance; Assuring that all programs provide high quality ...
Maintaining state administrative funding at 5 percent of a state's allocation; The Perkins IV law also included new requirements for “programs of study” that link academic and technical content across secondary and post-secondary education, and strengthened local accountability provisions that will ensure continuous program improvement.
The Vocational Education Act was renamed the Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Technical Education Act in 1984. Amendments in 1990 created the Tech-Prep Program, designed to coordinate educational activities into a coherent sequence of courses. The Act was renamed the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006.
The weather report across the state for the week of May 9, 2022, in Indiana was just about perfect, and yet that didn't stop 71 baseball and 19 softball high school games from being cancelled.
Youth apprenticeship has been successfully piloted in a number of states including, Washington, Wisconsin, Colorado, Oregon, North Carolina and South Carolina. In these states, thousands of high school students engage in both classroom technical training and paid structured on-the-job training across a number of high-growth, high-demand industries.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
American Northwest College, [2] an exempt institution by the Washington Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board; Bates Technical College; Bellingham Technical College; Clover Park Technical College; Lake Washington Institute of Technology; Renton Technical College; Spokane Community College; The Art Institute of Seattle; Carrington ...