College/ office profile
- The office that I did my internship at is New York City College of Technology in their legal affairs office. The office is within the college which is in Brooklyn. The size of the office is reasonable and good since their is only four people in the office.
- The college and office itself is public. Every single day thousands of individuals come to the college.
- The office’s primary business is to enforce the law and apply it to each individual case. The cases they can deal with are harassment, stalking and so forth. This can lead to the lawyers handling compliance’s.
- The office itself sees both students and teachers. The lawyers have also been connected to federal cases and work closely with the registar office. The lawyers do this to protect the privacy laws that are practiced within the college.
- The college was founded in 1946.The urgent mission at the time was to provide training to GIs returning from the Second World War . In 2004 the college introduced approval of additional bachelor’s degree and specialized certificate programs brings New York City College of Technology’s offerings to 56, with additional baccalaureate programs in the development stages.
- I worked in a small area with one of the secretaries as a web designer
- One article is called Remarks at Pathways in Technology Early College High School in New York City. It is dated October 25, 2013 .The article discusses how what’s going
on here at P–TECH is outstanding. The article believes this is what children need to stay on the right track. It decided how college tuition should be lowered so more individuals can go to college and open more doors. This P-TECH program is also at IBM and City University of New York. The writer also believes we need to redesign more of our high schools so that they teach young people the skills required for a high-tech economy. - A second article is called Half of City’s Tech Workers Don’t Have College Degrees, Report . The article come out in New York Times newspaper on 4/2/2014.The article reports on the study released on April 2, 2014 suggesting that almost half of the technology jobs in New York City are filled by people without college degrees.