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Bryman College was a system of for-profit colleges in the United States.Bryman College became Everest College in April 2007 and returned to the Bryman name after BioHealth Colleges purchased the San Jose, Hayward, San Francisco and Los Angeles-Wilshire locations.
Olympia Career Training Institute – multiple locations, now Everest College; Pacific College of Oriental Medicine – a subsidiary of Quad Partners; Parks College – multiple locations; not to be confused with Ithaca College's Roy H. Park School of Communications; Paier College of Art – Hamden, Connecticut; Pennco Tech – multiple locations
Corinthian Colleges, Inc. (CCi) was a for-profit post-secondary education company in North America. Its subsidiaries offered career-oriented diploma and degree programs in health care, business, criminal justice, transportation technology and maintenance, construction trades, and information technology. [1]
National Education Center Logo. National Education Centers, Inc (NEC) was a for-profit post-secondary education organization in North America. Through more than 50 campuses and subsidiaries, it offered career-oriented diploma, Associates and bachelor's degree programs in advertising design, architectural design, health care, business, criminal justice, transportation technology, construction ...
Bryman Institute is now Everest Institute, a system of for-profit colleges in the United States, with campuses in Brighton, Massachusetts, Chelsea, Massachusetts, Eagan, Minnesota, Gahanna, Ohio, and South Plainfield, New Jersey. The schools are owned by Corinthian Colleges, Inc., which also owns the similarly named Everest College system.
Broadview College, originally The Bryman School, and later Utah Career College, was founded in downtown Salt Lake City in 1977. In 1988, the school moved to a more central location for Salt Lake City Valley, 1144 West 3300 South.
Anthem Education Group (formerly The Chubb Institute) was a Florida-based organization that operated a chain of for-profit, technical schools in the United States, called Florida Career College. In 2018, their website listed 11 campuses, ten in Florida and one in Houston, Texas.
Its parent company, Zovio, however, continued to be a publicly traded for-profit college company. [79] In December 2020, Congress passed a bill that improved safeguards for veterans exploited by predatory colleges. [80] In October 2021, Vista College, a Texas-based school with approximately 3000 students closed abruptly. [81]