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SENAI has 744 operational units in all states of the Union, which offer more than 1,800 courses. SENAI is part of an integrated social action system which was founded by industry and political leaders in the 1950s, under the leadership of Euvaldo Lodi , which includes SESI (Social Service for Industry), and the Instituto Euvaldo Lodi .
The following is a list of public and private institutions of higher education currently operating in the state of New York. See defunct colleges and universities in New York state for institutions that once existed but have since closed.
CETIQT is one of the school units of SENAI (Serviço Nacional de Aprendizagem Industrial; English: National Service for Industrial Training), a network of not-for-profit secondary level professional schools established and maintained by the Brazilian Confederation of Industry. This university has two bachelor degrees: chemical engineering and ...
New York Institute of Technology - Old Westbury. New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine; St. Joseph's University. St. Joseph's University - Patchogue; Touro College and University System. Touro College Graduate School of Education - Bay Shore [6] Touro College School of Health Sciences - Bay Shore [7] Touro Law Center ...
The areas that concern the so-called "creative industries" are covered in the courses of two Rio de Janeiro's units: SENAI Maracanã [2] (audiovisual, computer animation, printing office, design, web and information technology) and SENAI Laranjeiras [3] (audiovisual, computer animation and information technology).
The General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of the City of New York is an educational and cultural association at 20 West 44th Street in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. It was founded on November 17, 1785, by 22 men who gathered in Walter Heyer's public-house at No. 75 King Street (renamed Pine Street), one block from Wall Street , in ...
A key former initiative of the Board of Regents, created to better bring higher education to New York State's nontraditional adult learners, was the Board of Regents' Regents External Degree Program, or REX, which became Regents College in 1984 and then the separate and independent Excelsior College in 1998–2001.
Between 1946 and 1948, the Temporary Commission on the Need for a State University, chaired by Owen D. Young, chairman of General Electric Company, studied New York's existing higher education institutions. It was known New York's private institutions of higher education were highly discriminatory and failed to provide for many New Yorkers. [9]