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chicago colleges
Want To Go To Chicago Colleges?
There are many Chicago colleges to choose from. What you need
to know to help you make a better decision is if you want to go to an out of
town college or a stay at home college. There are many different colleges that
offer standard studies as well as plenty of technical schools out there, but
what do you want to do?
For staying in your home area the best way to go would be going to a technical
school. Technical schools such as ITT tech or UTI will give you the
comprehensive run down of what you need to be a good employee. They will teach
you on a five day a week basis for about ten hours a day of study. Once you
complete a two to four year class schedule and graduate, they will place you in
the employment district and get you on your way to making lots of cash.
Chicago Kent College of Law is an ABA accredited law school in Chicago,
Illinois. Chicago Kent is part of the Illinois Institute of Technology. The
School's name is a combination of two law schools which merged in the year
nineteen hundred to form present day Chicago Kent: the Chicago College of Law
and the Kent College of Law. The two thousand and five full-time entering class
had a median LSAT of one hundred and sixty-one, a median GPA of three point five
zero which is most impressive.
Chicago Musical College is currently a division of Chicago
College of Performing Arts at Roosevelt University. It was founded in eighteen
sixty-seven, less than four decades after the city of Chicago was incorporated.
It has given over a hundred years of uninterrupted service to music and music
education and has played an important role in the development of the cultural
life of the Midwest. In eighteen sixty-seven, Ziegfeld established his own
Chicago Academy of Music, the fourth conservatory in America. In eighteen
seventy-one, the conservatory moved to a new building which was destroyed only a
few weeks later by the great Chicago fire. Despite the conflagration, the
College was again up and running by the end of the year. In eighteen
seventy-two, the school changed its name to Chicago Musical College. Over nine
hundred students were enrolled in that year. Four years later the State of
Illinois accredited the College as a degree granting institution of higher
learning. A preparatory division was opened which established branches
throughout the city.
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