Community college
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In Canada and the United States, a community college, sometimes called a junior college, is an educational institution providing post-secondary education and lower-level tertiary education, granting certificates, diplomas, and associate's degrees. The name derives from the fact that community colleges primarily accept, and attract, students from the local community.
Community colleges have "open admission"; that is, anyone may be admitted. They are supported with public funds, and their tuition costs substantially less than that of a traditional four-year public or private college or university. For these reasons, low-income students and students not yet academically prepared for a university curriculum are attracted to community colleges. Community college students can range in age from teenagers in their junior and senior years of high school to tranfer students in mid-20s, to working adults taking classes at night to complete a degree. Though juniors and seniors from high schools are usually allowed,it is technically possible for all K12 students under the policy, commonly known as "Concurrent Enrollment".
Community college's generally offer both two-year study programs towards an Associate's degree or diploma or a college transfer program in which a student takes necessary courses needed to qualify for admission to a four-year college or university. Thus, for students who wishes to obtain a bachelor's degree at a four-year college but fail to meet academic standards for attending college upon graduation from high school can use the community college system to obtain the necessary requirements to attend the college of their choice. Community colleges also offer certificates for completing vocational training in a wide variety of technical or otherwise specialized fields such as nursing. A certificate generally takes less than two years to complete, and students who earn a certificate usually enter straight into the workforce.
Community colleges also offer a number of services to other members of the community, such as job placement, adult continuing-education classes, and developmental classes for children.
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List of community colleges (Incomplete)
Colleges are listed in alphabetical order by state/location, then name:
United States
Arizona
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Arkansas
- National Park Community College
California
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Florida
- Brevard Community College
Illinois
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Iowa
- Hawkeye Community College
- Indian Hills Community College
Kansas
- Cloud County Community College
- Johnson County Community College
- Kansas City Kansas Community College
Kentucky
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Maryland
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The Community Colleges Of Maryland
Massachusetts
- Bristol Community College
- Bunker Hill Community College
- North Shore Community College
Michigan
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Missouri
New Jersey
- Union County College
New York
- See also: Community colleges in New York State
North Carolina
- Central Piedmont Community College
- Isothermal Community College
Texas
- Austin Community College
- Collin County Community College District
- Dallas County Community College District
- Houston Community College
Virginia
- J. Sargeant Reynolds Community College
Washington
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Wisconsin
- Madison Area Technical College
- Milwaukee Area Technical College
Canada
Manitoba
Ontario
See also
External links
- The Instructional Role of the Two-Year College Learning Resources Center
- The Economic Outcomes of Community College Attendance
- Building an Instructional Framework for Effective Community College Developmental Education
- The Role of Scholarship in the Community College
- Internationalizing the Community College: Examples of Success