Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Brightwood College, formerly Kaplan College, was a system of for-profit colleges in the United States, owned and operated by Education Corporation of America. Main qualifications offered included health, business, criminal justice, information technology, nursing and professional training (trades) programs. [1]
Education Corporation of America, headquartered in Birmingham, Alabama, was a privately held company that operated proprietary colleges across the United States. Included were three schools with 31 campuses, plus one online school and four affiliated businesses. The schools abruptly announced their closing before next semester, after ECA was ...
Kaplan University. Kaplan University ( KU) was a private online for-profit university owned by Kaplan, Inc., a subsidiary of Graham Holdings Company. It was predominantly a distance learning institution, maintaining 14 ground locations across the United States. The university was named in honor of Stanley H. Kaplan, [3] who founded Kaplan Test ...
California Northstate University College of Medicine – Elk Grove, California. Capella University – Minneapolis, Minnesota and online. Carrington College – 17 locations in the United States. Chamberlain College of Nursing – a subsidiary of Adtalem. Charleston School of Law – Charleston, South Carolina.
The United States may soon see more higher education institutions shut their doors after college enrollment has declined in recent years, according to a new analysis. A report from Fitch Ratings ...
February 27, 2024 at 8:17 PM. A bill has been introduced into the Mississippi Senate that would call for the closure of three state-funded universities by June 30, 2028. The bill, which was filed ...
The GAO report also found that the majority of students affected by a closing institution were enrolled at a for-profit college. For instance, between 2010 and 2020 around 246,000 student loan ...
TESST College of Technology began offering instruction in electronics in 1957 as TESST Technology Institute. The campus was located in Hyattsville, Maryland. In December 1992, TESST expanded its reach in the Baltimore market by acquiring the Arundel Institute of Technology. In the summer of 1998, the Hyattsville and Baltimore campuses relocated ...