Techskills

TechSkills is a nationally recognized career training school, specializing in skills and certification training for careers in Information Technology, Healthcare Services and Business. It is a private, for-profit provider of career training for adult learners. The company operates 18 campuses in 13 states in the United States.

History

TechSkills was founded in 1996 as AmeriTrain by John Poland. Its first campus opened in Brookfield, Wisconsin in 1996. In 1999, the company was renamed TechSkills. Five new campuses were opened in 1999, with 12 campuses added in 2000, nine campuses in 2001, and one campus in 2002. TechSkills’ corporate headquarters was relocated to Austin, Texas in 2001. Beginning in 2010, TechSkills LLC campuses began to see dramatic decline and began closing multiple campuses and selling other(s) to TechSkills of California (Las Vegas). More campus closures are expected throughout 2011-2012 respectively. More than 40,000 students have graduated from their programs.[1]

Campus locations

State City
Arizona Phoenix, Mesa (closed)
California Sacramento, San Jose (closed)
Colorado Greenwood Village (Denver) (closed)
Florida Tampa (closed)
Indiana Indianapolis
Kansas Lenexa (Kansas City) (closed)
Minnesota Bloomington (Minneapolis) (closed)
Missouri St. Louis (closed)
Nevada Las Vegas (closed)
North Carolina Raleigh, Greensboro (closed), Charlotte (closed)
Ohio Cincinnati, Columbus
Oklahoma Oklahoma City (closed)
Texas Dallas, Houston
Wisconsin Brookfield (Milwaukee) (closed)

Accreditation

The following Tech's kills campuses are nationally accredited by the Accrediting Council for Continuing Education & Training (ACCET):[2] Brookfield, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Columbus, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Sacramento, and San Jose.

Courses of study

TechSkills offers career education programs in Information Technology, Allied Health Services, Accounting & Bookkeeping, and Project Management. TechSkills students may pursue industry certification through Information Technology vendors including Microsoft, Cisco, Oracle, CompTIA, Prosoft, and (ISC)2; and through Health Services associations including the National Healthcareer Association and the Pharmacy Technician Certification Board. Information Technology graduates may enter careers in IT engineering, network design, software development, database administration, IT security, web design or computer hardware. Health Services graduates may enter careers in medical coding, medical billing, medical transcription, medical office administration or pharmacy.

Learning model

TechSkills utilizes blended learning to deliver its education programs, and emphasizes flexibility and preparation for employment.

gollark: The spec is totally compatible with floats with 0-bit exponents and no sign.
gollark: I assume you've written a RISC-V interpreter in BQN to run some dot product code.
gollark: All results are accurate, actually.
gollark: The technology is well-tested thanks to the use with HelloBoi and mgollarks.
gollark: My other idea was that the system also make a simulation of you using neural networks™ so that it can answer complex queries without you actually being available.

References

  1. http://www.workforce-com.com/cer/docs/summaries2007/CERfeatures7_07.pdf
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-03-12. Retrieved 2009-04-24.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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