| Name | Title | Contact Details |
|---|---|---|
Dean Chang |
Interim Chief Innovation Officer and Associate Vice President for Innovation and Economic Development | Profile |
Samuel Porter |
Associate Director of Research Technology | Profile |
Jeff Hollingsworth |
Vice President and Chief Information Officer | Profile |
Matt Kramer |
Director of Information Security | Profile |
Mark Cather |
Chief Information Security Officer | Profile |
Garden City Community College is officially accredited by The Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools, www.ncahigherlearningcommission.org, (800) 621-7440. In addition, the GCCC Practical Nursing Program is approved by the Kansas State Board of Nursing, and the Associate Degree Program is approved by the Kansas State Board of Nursing and is accredited by the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing (ACEN). Certain GCCC programs have also obtained other specific individual accreditation. GCCC has been accepted for the continuous quality improvement accreditation model by the national Academic Quality Improvement Project.
Hondros College is a Westerville, OH-based company in the Education sector.
Founded in 1969, SUNY Schenectady County Community College (SUNY Schenectady) is one of 30 community colleges in the State University of New York system, the largest comprehensive university system in the United States.
Tarrant County College District, a comprehensive two-year institution established in 1965, is dedicated to providing quality education that exceeds the expectations of the people of Tarrant County. More than 50,000 students are enrolled in TCC`s associate degree and technical programs, making it the sixth largest among Texas colleges and universities. Community and Industry Education offers additional opportunities for businesses and individuals of all ages, through non-credit courses, workshops and customized training programs. The college has six major campuses in the cities of Hurst (Northeast Campus), Fort Worth (Northwest, South, Trinity River and Connect campuses), and Arlington (Southeast Campus), with administrative offices in downtown Fort Worth at the May Owen Center.
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health traces its roots to public health activism at the beginning of the last century, a time of energetic social reform. The School began as the Harvard-MIT School of Health Officers, founded in 1913 as the first professional training program of public health in America. The partnership offered courses in preventive medicine at Harvard Medical School, sanitary engineering at Harvard University and allied subjects at MIT.