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Technology Centers, in Oklahoma, are Career and Technical schools which provide career and technology education for high school students in the U.S. state of Oklahoma.The students generally spend part of each day in their respective schools pursuing academic subjects in addition to attending classes in their affiliated vo-tech center.
ATI Enterprises, also known as ATI Schools and Colleges [1] and ATI Training Center, [2] was a group of career training schools operating in the southern and western United States. The company imploded in 2013 under a burden of multiple lawsuits, legal claims and financial issues.
Oklahoma Baptist University: Shawnee: Private (Not For Profit) Baccalaureate / Associates Colleges 1,399 1910 Oklahoma Christian University: Oklahoma City: Private (Not For Profit) Masters University: 2,537 1950 Oklahoma City University: Oklahoma City: Private (Not For Profit) Masters University: 2,550 1904 Oral Roberts University: Tulsa ...
J.B Perky was the first director. In 1966, Oklahoma technology center school districts were formed, and in 1967, Tri County Tech became the state's first area vocational-technical school. On July 1, 1968, the Oklahoma State Board of Vocational and Technical Education was established as a separate entity from the State Department of Education.
Mount Saint Mary High School, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County; Oklahoma Job Corps Academy, Tulsa, Tulsa County; Oklahoma School for the Deaf, Sulphur, Murray County; Parkview-Ok. School For The Blind, Muskogee, Muskogee County; St. John Christian Heritage, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County; St. Paul's Lutheran School (Oklahoma), Enid, Garfield County
Oklahoma Technology Institute, also known as OTI, is a school in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in the United States.OTI was established in 1996 by Jeanne Fanning. The school is nationally accredited by the Council on Occupational Education and licensed by the Oklahoma Board of Private and Vocational Schools.
Before Oklahoma statehood, the site of the school had served as a Creek Nation orphanage from 1892 to 1906. In 1943 the United States Army acquired the site to serve under the jurisdiction of Camp Gruber as Glennan General Hospital, initially intended for U.S. troops but subsequently designated as a facility for treating prisoners of war (mainly Germans) captured in North Africa and elsewhere. [2]
Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences - (Tulsa) Langston University - Tulsa campus; Oklahoma State University Institute of Technology (OSUIT Okmulgee) Oklahoma State University–Tulsa (upper division undergraduate and graduate campus) Oral Roberts University (private) Philips Theological Seminary (private) Tulsa Community College