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The Monte Ahuja College of Business was first formed as the Nance College of Business, named for James J. Nance, [2] a Cleveland industrialist who served as the university's first chairman of the board of trustees. At the onset, it was an applied vocational school and was housed in World War II-era Quonset huts without any permanent building on ...
Ohio Technical College is a private for-profit automotive technical college in Cleveland, Ohio. [1] It offered its first classes in 1969 as Ohio Diesel Mechanics School. OTC offers programs in automotive, auto-diesel, collision, diesel, manufacturer, motor sports, PowerSport, restoration and welding.
Accel Schools, styled ACCEL Schools, is a for-profit education management organization that operates 77 charter schools and 15 online schools primarily in Ohio. Accel schools have operated on significantly lower budgets than other Cleveland schools.
The Weatherhead School of Management is a private business school of Case Western Reserve University located in Cleveland, Ohio. Weatherhead offers programs concentrated in sustainability, design innovation, healthcare, organizational behavior, global entrepreneurship, and executive education.
Between 1920 and 1930 Cleveland Public Schools, now Cleveland Metropolitan School District, built 35 schools one of which was the Girls' Opportunity School which was built in 1924 and is the school that evolved into the current Jane Addams Business Careers Center. The programs offered were for young women who had difficulty with academic study.
Max S. Hayes High School is a public high school located in Cleveland, Ohio, United States. It is part of the Cleveland Metropolitan School District. The school is a career training school with several vocational and career-based programs, otherwise known as a trade school. Students can go there to learn a trade.
The 2022 U.S. News & World Report ranking of best public affairs graduate schools ranked the Levin College #2 in the Urban Policy specialty, [17] #16 in the Local Government Management specialty., [18] #23 in the Nonprofit Management specialty, [19] and #40 in the Public Management and Leadership specialty. [20]
In 1968, the Sheboygan School of Vocational and Adult Education was renamed to Lakeshore Technical Institute (LTI). In 1974, LTI's main campus in Cleveland opened, constructed at a cost of $5 million. In 1978, student housing was first proposed at the Cleveland campus.