Vocational schools in the United States are traditionally two-year colleges which prepare students to enter the workforce after they receive an Associate degree. Students may also use courses as credit transferable to four-year universities. Programs often combine classroom lessons in theory with hands-on applications of the lessons students learned.
Alabama edit
Arizona edit
Arkansas edit
California edit
Colorado edit
Connecticut edit
Florida edit
Georgia edit
Idaho edit
Illinois edit
Indiana edit
Iowa edit
Kansas edit
Kentucky edit
Louisiana edit
- Culinard
- Louisiana Technical College
- Northwest Louisiana Technical College
- Remington College
Maine edit
Maryland edit
Massachusetts edit
Michigan edit
Minnesota edit
Mississippi edit
Missouri edit
Montana edit
Nebraska edit
Nevada edit
New Hampshire edit
New Jersey edit
New Mexico edit
New York edit
North Carolina edit
North Dakota edit
Ohio edit
Oklahoma edit
Oregon edit
Pennsylvania edit
Rhode Island edit
South Carolina edit
South Dakota edit
Tennessee edit
Texas edit
Utah edit
Virginia edit
- Culinard
- Everest College
- Liberty University, in connection with Virginia Technical Institute.[1]
Washington edit
- American Northwest College,[2] an exempt institution by the Washington Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board
- Bates Technical College
- Bellingham Technical College
- Clover Park Technical College
- Lake Washington Institute of Technology
- Renton Technical College
- Spokane Community College
- The Art Institute of Seattle
- Carrington College (US)
- Everest College