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Cincinnati State's main campus is located at 3520 Central Parkway, near the junction of Interstates 74 and 75. The college also operates satellite campuses in Middletown, Harrison, and Evendale. The Cincinnati West campus, located at the college-owned Cincinnati West Airport in Harrison, offers classes in aviation maintenance technologies. [7]
Independent Learning Centre distance education high school credit courses; Peel District School Board continuing education online; Toronto District School Board virtual school; York Region District School Board continuing education e-learning, also known as night high school (uses D2L)
Hillcrest Academy is located in Springfield Township at 246 Bonham Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 45215. There are 22 on-site buildings comprising 91,329 total gross square feet. Buildings include 12 unattached housing units, gymnasium, recreation hall, chapel, 13-classroom school building, indoor swimming pool, dining hall, and administrative offices.
Antonelli College was a for-profit career training school with a main campus located in Cincinnati. Founded in 1947 as the Gebhardt Art School, the college later switched its name to Ohio Visual Art Institute in the mid-1970s then renaming itself to Antonelli College in 1982.
The Springer School and Center is the only regional school "devoted entirely to the education of children with learning disabilities." [3] St Rita School for the Deaf [4] educates students up through high school and vocational school. In August 2007, Cincinnati Magazine published an article rating 36 private high schools in greater Cincinnati. [5]
Mantei Center (formerly Engineering Research Center) Opened in 1995, this facility houses state-of-the-art research laboratories and offices for graduate students and faculty. It is conveniently located adjacent to the existing engineering complex and was designed to look like a 4-cylinder engine.
Chatfield College was a private Roman Catholic college in St. Martin and Cincinnati, Ohio. Chatfield was founded by the Ursulines of Brown County in 1971. [1] Chatfield offered the Associate of Arts and Associate of Applied Science degrees. The college was accredited by the Higher Learning Commission.
The Wambachs visited the Ohio State Board of Education and a number of Christian schools within a 150-mile radius of Cincinnati. Their research was aided by the Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI), Christian school administrators and a number of local parents.