Education | College Preparation | New Mexico College Opportunities

Luna Community College

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Technical

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:CSS

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Webpage

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Web Packs

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Web Forms

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:TopSubs

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Text-Tools2

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Text-Tools

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:DreamTasker

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:News2

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:News

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Links

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Links-FTP

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:Import-Export

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:HTML

Macintosh HD:Stacks_2006:All

 

Community college receives grant

 

Luna Community College in Las Vegas, N.M., has received a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to give minority students scholarships for training in high-tech and energy-related careers.

 

Because of the grant, the college is now accepting scholarships for students who are interested in pursuing careers in computer programming, computer information systems, electronics, manufacturing technology, drafting, automotive mechanics and welding. The next deadline to submit a scholarship application is Feb. 28. To get an application, or for more information, call Luna at (800) 588-7232, ext. 1202.

Middle College High School (Gallup)

UNM to offer middle college program

 

GALLUP - A program at The University of New Mexico's campus here will help high-school dropouts and home-schooled students fulfill graduation requirements while earning college credit.

 

The program, called the Middle College High School, will offer 11th- and 12th-grade students career and technical training as well as one-on-one mentoring.

 

"The middle college will help the students get a feel for college," said Joe Sweeney, the program's principal. "It gives them an opportunity to develop independence, maturity ... and it will give them an edge."

 

Sweeney said the middle college is unique because it's considered a charter school, which gives its board more autonomy over the curriculum, faculty selection and other issues affecting the school's direction.

 

The program, which is scheduled to begin this fall, will select 50 applicants through a lottery system. Students must have at least 10 high-school credits to apply.

 

The school will cost an estimated $419,000 annually and will be financed by a combination of state and federal funds.

2009-08-30T20:05-07:00