College & Career Readiness
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FINANCIAL AID Process
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TeenLife Guides
TeenLife's annual guides are here to provide you with the latest information on some of the most exciting teen enrichment opportunities. Check out our website by clicking the link above and view digital guides and learn more about: summer programs, gap year programs, STEM programs, online programs, performing and visual arts programs, and more! Once you open each guide, you can download a PDF by clicking the down arrow on the upper left-hand side of the screen.
ECC Talent Search Transitions Program
TRiO programs are designed to identify and provide services to individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds. The ECC TRiO programs serve and assist low-income individuals, first-generation college students, and individuals with disabilities to progress through the academic pipeline from middle school through postsecondary programs.
Programa de transición de búsqueda de talento de ECC
Los programas TRiO están diseñados para identificar y brindar servicios a personas de entornos desfavorecidos. Los programas ECC TRiO sirven y ayudan a las personas de bajos ingresos, los estudiantes universitarios de primera generación y las personas con discapacidades a progresar a través de la línea académica desde la escuela secundaria hasta los programas de educación superior.
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O*NET OnLine
The O*NET Program is the nation's primary source of occupational information. Valid data are essential to understanding the rapidly changing nature of work and how it impacts the workforce and the U.S. economy. From this information, applications are developed to facilitate the development and maintenance of a skilled workforce.
Central to the project is the O*NET database, containing hundreds of standardized and occupation-specific descriptors on almost 1,000 occupations covering the entire U.S. economy. The database, which is available to the public at no cost, is continually updated from input by a broad range of workers in each occupation.
O*NET information is used by millions of individuals every year, including those taking advantage of O*NET Online, My Next Move, and other publicly and privately developed applications. The data have proven vital in helping people find the training and jobs they need, and employers the skilled workers necessary to be competitive in the marketplace.
The Occupational Information Network (O*NET) is developed under the sponsorship of the U.S. Department of Labor/Employment and Training Administration (USDOL/ETA) through a grant to the North Carolina Department of Commerce.