Northern Lights College
MottoB.C.'s Energy College
Typepost-secondary community college
Established1975
PresidentDr. Bryn Kulmatycki
Vice-presidentSusan Hunter
DeanMark Heartt (Trades and Apprenticeship); Steve Roe (Academic and Career Programs); Tracy Donnelly (Workforce Training and Continuing Education)
Students625 Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) for 2016/2017[1]
Location, ,
Campusurban, suburban, remote
ColoursBlue & Green ;
NicknameNLC
AffiliationsACCC, BCC.
Websitehttp://nlc.bc.ca/
Nlc

Northern Lights CollegeRise of the triad emulator. is an institution that provides post-secondary education to residents of Northern British Columbia. It currently has campuses and access centers in eight communities across the northern third of British Columbia, with Regional Administration located on the Dawson Creek campus. NLC has a working agreement with the University of Northern British Columbia.[2] The college President and CEO (Oct. 2015) is Dr. Bryn Kulmatycki.

List of campuses[edit]

Northern lights college is a great place to learn, the staff are the most kind and polite people you will meet in dawson, the instructors are some of the best in northern BC and if you wana learn, GET IN DER. Jan 09, 2019  Northern Lights Cannabis Strain Grow Info. Adding to the already numerous positive attributes of the Northern Lights strain, it is considerably easy to cultivate, proving a high resistance to diseases, pests, bugs, powdery mildew, mold and more. Likewise, it is simple to cultivate in either an indoor or outdoor environment and only grows in the.

List of Access Centres[edit]

Programs[edit]

Northern Lights College offers programs in the following areas:

  • Trades and Apprenticeships
  • University Arts and Sciences/ Academic
  • Business Management/Applied Business Technology[3]
  • Career and College Preparation/ Upgrading
  • Workforce Training/Continuing Education
  • Oil & Gas Training
  • Clean Energy Technologies - Wind Turbine Maintenance
  • Early Childhood Education and Care/ Education Assistant
  • Teacher Training
  • Practical Nursing/Health Care Assistant
  • Aircraft Maintenance Engineering

Aboriginal services[edit]

Northern Lights College has Aboriginal Gathering Spaces located at the following campuses: Dawson Creek, Fort St. John, Chetwynd and Fort Nelson.

The Fort Nelson Gathering Space opened in 2009, while the remaining Gathering Spaces opened in 2011.

The opening of the Chetwynd Gathering Space was highlighted by the attendance of then Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, Steven L. Point.[4]

Scholarships and bursaries[edit]

The Northern Lights College Foundation is the recipient of funds held in trust for various awards for education. Formed in 1981, the Foundation's objectives are:

  1. to foster community interest in promoting higher education and training
  2. to act as a recipient of trust funds in the form of monies or other properties
  3. to assist in community projects and promotion of higher education and to grant monies to Northern Lights College for the designated use of scholarships and bursaries to be awarded to students.

The Government of Canada sponsors an Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool that lists over 680 scholarships, bursaries, and other incentives offered by governments, universities, and industry to support Aboriginal post-secondary participation. Northern Lights College scholarships for Aboriginal, First Nations and Métis students include Awards for Aboriginal Women [5]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/education/post-secondary-education/institution-resources-administration/accountability-framework/iapr/2016-17/nlc_iapr_2016-17.pdf
  2. ^'Music at Community Colleges' in The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada
  3. ^'Northern Lights College Programs'.
  4. ^'Lieutenant Governor opens Aboriginal Gathering Space at NLC's Chetwynd Campus'. Northern Lights College. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  5. ^Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool

All facts, unless otherwise stated, are from Northern Lights College's web site:

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Northern_Lights_College&oldid=920485513'
Northern Lights College
MottoB.C.'s Energy College
Typepost-secondary community college
Established1975
PresidentDr. Bryn Kulmatycki
Vice-presidentSusan Hunter
DeanMark Heartt (Trades and Apprenticeship); Steve Roe (Academic and Career Programs); Tracy Donnelly (Workforce Training and Continuing Education)
Students625 Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) for 2016/2017[1]
Location, ,
Campusurban, suburban, remote
ColoursBlue & Green ;
NicknameNLC
AffiliationsACCC, BCC.
Websitehttp://nlc.bc.ca/

Northern Lights College is an institution that provides post-secondary education to residents of Northern British Columbia. It currently has campuses and access centers in eight communities across the northern third of British Columbia, with Regional Administration located on the Dawson Creek campus. NLC has a working agreement with the University of Northern British Columbia.[2] The college President and CEO (Oct. 2015) is Dr. Bryn Kulmatycki.

List of campuses[edit]

List of Access Centres[edit]

Programs[edit]

Northern Lights College offers programs in the following areas:

  • Trades and Apprenticeships
  • University Arts and Sciences/ Academic
  • Business Management/Applied Business Technology[3]
  • Career and College Preparation/ Upgrading
  • Workforce Training/Continuing Education
  • Oil & Gas Training
  • Clean Energy Technologies - Wind Turbine Maintenance
  • Early Childhood Education and Care/ Education Assistant
  • Teacher Training
  • Practical Nursing/Health Care Assistant
  • Aircraft Maintenance Engineering

Aboriginal services[edit]

Northern Lights College has Aboriginal Gathering Spaces located at the following campuses: Dawson Creek, Fort St. John, Chetwynd and Fort Nelson.

The Fort Nelson Gathering Space opened in 2009, while the remaining Gathering Spaces opened in 2011.

The opening of the Chetwynd Gathering Space was highlighted by the attendance of then Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, Steven L. Point.[4]

Scholarships and bursaries[edit]

The Northern Lights College Foundation is the recipient of funds held in trust for various awards for education. Formed in 1981, the Foundation's objectives are:

  1. to foster community interest in promoting higher education and training
  2. to act as a recipient of trust funds in the form of monies or other properties
  3. to assist in community projects and promotion of higher education and to grant monies to Northern Lights College for the designated use of scholarships and bursaries to be awarded to students.

The Government of Canada sponsors an Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool that lists over 680 scholarships, bursaries, and other incentives offered by governments, universities, and industry to support Aboriginal post-secondary participation. Northern Lights College scholarships for Aboriginal, First Nations and Métis students include Awards for Aboriginal Women [5]

Northern Lights College

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/education/post-secondary-education/institution-resources-administration/accountability-framework/iapr/2016-17/nlc_iapr_2016-17.pdf
  2. ^'Music at Community Colleges' in The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada
  3. ^'Northern Lights College Programs'.
  4. ^'Lieutenant Governor opens Aboriginal Gathering Space at NLC's Chetwynd Campus'. Northern Lights College. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  5. ^Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool

All facts, unless otherwise stated, are from Northern Lights College's web site:

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Northern_Lights_College&oldid=920485513'
Northern Lights College
MottoB.C.\'s Energy College
Typepost-secondary community college
Established1975
PresidentDr. Bryn Kulmatycki
Vice-presidentSusan Hunter
DeanMark Heartt (Trades and Apprenticeship); Steve Roe (Academic and Career Programs); Tracy Donnelly (Workforce Training and Continuing Education)
Students625 Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) for 2016/2017[1]
Location, ,
Campusurban, suburban, remote
ColoursBlue & Green ;
NicknameNLC
AffiliationsACCC, BCC.
Websitehttp://nlc.bc.ca/
\'Nlc\'

Northern Lights CollegeRise of the triad emulator. is an institution that provides post-secondary education to residents of Northern British Columbia. It currently has campuses and access centers in eight communities across the northern third of British Columbia, with Regional Administration located on the Dawson Creek campus. NLC has a working agreement with the University of Northern British Columbia.[2] The college President and CEO (Oct. 2015) is Dr. Bryn Kulmatycki.

List of campuses[edit]

Northern lights college is a great place to learn, the staff are the most kind and polite people you will meet in dawson, the instructors are some of the best in northern BC and if you wana learn, GET IN DER. Jan 09, 2019  Northern Lights Cannabis Strain Grow Info. Adding to the already numerous positive attributes of the Northern Lights strain, it is considerably easy to cultivate, proving a high resistance to diseases, pests, bugs, powdery mildew, mold and more. Likewise, it is simple to cultivate in either an indoor or outdoor environment and only grows in the.

List of Access Centres[edit]

Programs[edit]

Northern Lights College offers programs in the following areas:

  • Trades and Apprenticeships
  • University Arts and Sciences/ Academic
  • Business Management/Applied Business Technology[3]
  • Career and College Preparation/ Upgrading
  • Workforce Training/Continuing Education
  • Oil & Gas Training
  • Clean Energy Technologies - Wind Turbine Maintenance
  • Early Childhood Education and Care/ Education Assistant
  • Teacher Training
  • Practical Nursing/Health Care Assistant
  • Aircraft Maintenance Engineering

Aboriginal services[edit]

Northern Lights College has Aboriginal Gathering Spaces located at the following campuses: Dawson Creek, Fort St. John, Chetwynd and Fort Nelson.

The Fort Nelson Gathering Space opened in 2009, while the remaining Gathering Spaces opened in 2011.

The opening of the Chetwynd Gathering Space was highlighted by the attendance of then Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, Steven L. Point.[4]

Scholarships and bursaries[edit]

The Northern Lights College Foundation is the recipient of funds held in trust for various awards for education. Formed in 1981, the Foundation\'s objectives are:

  1. to foster community interest in promoting higher education and training
  2. to act as a recipient of trust funds in the form of monies or other properties
  3. to assist in community projects and promotion of higher education and to grant monies to Northern Lights College for the designated use of scholarships and bursaries to be awarded to students.

The Government of Canada sponsors an Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool that lists over 680 scholarships, bursaries, and other incentives offered by governments, universities, and industry to support Aboriginal post-secondary participation. Northern Lights College scholarships for Aboriginal, First Nations and Métis students include Awards for Aboriginal Women [5]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/education/post-secondary-education/institution-resources-administration/accountability-framework/iapr/2016-17/nlc_iapr_2016-17.pdf
  2. ^\'Music at Community Colleges\' in The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada
  3. ^\'Northern Lights College Programs\'.
  4. ^\'Lieutenant Governor opens Aboriginal Gathering Space at NLC\'s Chetwynd Campus\'. Northern Lights College. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  5. ^Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool

All facts, unless otherwise stated, are from Northern Lights College\'s web site:

External links[edit]

Retrieved from \'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Northern_Lights_College&oldid=920485513\'
Northern Lights College
MottoB.C.\'s Energy College
Typepost-secondary community college
Established1975
PresidentDr. Bryn Kulmatycki
Vice-presidentSusan Hunter
DeanMark Heartt (Trades and Apprenticeship); Steve Roe (Academic and Career Programs); Tracy Donnelly (Workforce Training and Continuing Education)
Students625 Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) for 2016/2017[1]
Location, ,
Campusurban, suburban, remote
ColoursBlue & Green ;
NicknameNLC
AffiliationsACCC, BCC.
Websitehttp://nlc.bc.ca/

Northern Lights College is an institution that provides post-secondary education to residents of Northern British Columbia. It currently has campuses and access centers in eight communities across the northern third of British Columbia, with Regional Administration located on the Dawson Creek campus. NLC has a working agreement with the University of Northern British Columbia.[2] The college President and CEO (Oct. 2015) is Dr. Bryn Kulmatycki.

List of campuses[edit]

List of Access Centres[edit]

Programs[edit]

Northern Lights College offers programs in the following areas:

  • Trades and Apprenticeships
  • University Arts and Sciences/ Academic
  • Business Management/Applied Business Technology[3]
  • Career and College Preparation/ Upgrading
  • Workforce Training/Continuing Education
  • Oil & Gas Training
  • Clean Energy Technologies - Wind Turbine Maintenance
  • Early Childhood Education and Care/ Education Assistant
  • Teacher Training
  • Practical Nursing/Health Care Assistant
  • Aircraft Maintenance Engineering

Aboriginal services[edit]

Northern Lights College has Aboriginal Gathering Spaces located at the following campuses: Dawson Creek, Fort St. John, Chetwynd and Fort Nelson.

The Fort Nelson Gathering Space opened in 2009, while the remaining Gathering Spaces opened in 2011.

The opening of the Chetwynd Gathering Space was highlighted by the attendance of then Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, Steven L. Point.[4]

Scholarships and bursaries[edit]

The Northern Lights College Foundation is the recipient of funds held in trust for various awards for education. Formed in 1981, the Foundation\'s objectives are:

  1. to foster community interest in promoting higher education and training
  2. to act as a recipient of trust funds in the form of monies or other properties
  3. to assist in community projects and promotion of higher education and to grant monies to Northern Lights College for the designated use of scholarships and bursaries to be awarded to students.

The Government of Canada sponsors an Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool that lists over 680 scholarships, bursaries, and other incentives offered by governments, universities, and industry to support Aboriginal post-secondary participation. Northern Lights College scholarships for Aboriginal, First Nations and Métis students include Awards for Aboriginal Women [5]

\'Northern

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/education/post-secondary-education/institution-resources-administration/accountability-framework/iapr/2016-17/nlc_iapr_2016-17.pdf
  2. ^\'Music at Community Colleges\' in The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada
  3. ^\'Northern Lights College Programs\'.
  4. ^\'Lieutenant Governor opens Aboriginal Gathering Space at NLC\'s Chetwynd Campus\'. Northern Lights College. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  5. ^Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool

All facts, unless otherwise stated, are from Northern Lights College\'s web site:

External links[edit]

Retrieved from \'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Northern_Lights_College&oldid=920485513\'
...'>Northern Lights College(15.03.2020)
  • appliberty.netlify.app▲▲▲ Northern Lights College ▲▲▲
  • Northern Lights College
    MottoB.C.\'s Energy College
    Typepost-secondary community college
    Established1975
    PresidentDr. Bryn Kulmatycki
    Vice-presidentSusan Hunter
    DeanMark Heartt (Trades and Apprenticeship); Steve Roe (Academic and Career Programs); Tracy Donnelly (Workforce Training and Continuing Education)
    Students625 Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) for 2016/2017[1]
    Location, ,
    Campusurban, suburban, remote
    ColoursBlue & Green ;
    NicknameNLC
    AffiliationsACCC, BCC.
    Websitehttp://nlc.bc.ca/
    \'Nlc\'

    Northern Lights CollegeRise of the triad emulator. is an institution that provides post-secondary education to residents of Northern British Columbia. It currently has campuses and access centers in eight communities across the northern third of British Columbia, with Regional Administration located on the Dawson Creek campus. NLC has a working agreement with the University of Northern British Columbia.[2] The college President and CEO (Oct. 2015) is Dr. Bryn Kulmatycki.

    List of campuses[edit]

    Northern lights college is a great place to learn, the staff are the most kind and polite people you will meet in dawson, the instructors are some of the best in northern BC and if you wana learn, GET IN DER. Jan 09, 2019  Northern Lights Cannabis Strain Grow Info. Adding to the already numerous positive attributes of the Northern Lights strain, it is considerably easy to cultivate, proving a high resistance to diseases, pests, bugs, powdery mildew, mold and more. Likewise, it is simple to cultivate in either an indoor or outdoor environment and only grows in the.

    List of Access Centres[edit]

    Programs[edit]

    Northern Lights College offers programs in the following areas:

    • Trades and Apprenticeships
    • University Arts and Sciences/ Academic
    • Business Management/Applied Business Technology[3]
    • Career and College Preparation/ Upgrading
    • Workforce Training/Continuing Education
    • Oil & Gas Training
    • Clean Energy Technologies - Wind Turbine Maintenance
    • Early Childhood Education and Care/ Education Assistant
    • Teacher Training
    • Practical Nursing/Health Care Assistant
    • Aircraft Maintenance Engineering

    Aboriginal services[edit]

    Northern Lights College has Aboriginal Gathering Spaces located at the following campuses: Dawson Creek, Fort St. John, Chetwynd and Fort Nelson.

    The Fort Nelson Gathering Space opened in 2009, while the remaining Gathering Spaces opened in 2011.

    The opening of the Chetwynd Gathering Space was highlighted by the attendance of then Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, Steven L. Point.[4]

    Scholarships and bursaries[edit]

    The Northern Lights College Foundation is the recipient of funds held in trust for various awards for education. Formed in 1981, the Foundation\'s objectives are:

    1. to foster community interest in promoting higher education and training
    2. to act as a recipient of trust funds in the form of monies or other properties
    3. to assist in community projects and promotion of higher education and to grant monies to Northern Lights College for the designated use of scholarships and bursaries to be awarded to students.

    The Government of Canada sponsors an Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool that lists over 680 scholarships, bursaries, and other incentives offered by governments, universities, and industry to support Aboriginal post-secondary participation. Northern Lights College scholarships for Aboriginal, First Nations and Métis students include Awards for Aboriginal Women [5]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/education/post-secondary-education/institution-resources-administration/accountability-framework/iapr/2016-17/nlc_iapr_2016-17.pdf
    2. ^\'Music at Community Colleges\' in The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada
    3. ^\'Northern Lights College Programs\'.
    4. ^\'Lieutenant Governor opens Aboriginal Gathering Space at NLC\'s Chetwynd Campus\'. Northern Lights College. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
    5. ^Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool

    All facts, unless otherwise stated, are from Northern Lights College\'s web site:

    External links[edit]

    Retrieved from \'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Northern_Lights_College&oldid=920485513\'
    Northern Lights College
    MottoB.C.\'s Energy College
    Typepost-secondary community college
    Established1975
    PresidentDr. Bryn Kulmatycki
    Vice-presidentSusan Hunter
    DeanMark Heartt (Trades and Apprenticeship); Steve Roe (Academic and Career Programs); Tracy Donnelly (Workforce Training and Continuing Education)
    Students625 Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) for 2016/2017[1]
    Location, ,
    Campusurban, suburban, remote
    ColoursBlue & Green ;
    NicknameNLC
    AffiliationsACCC, BCC.
    Websitehttp://nlc.bc.ca/

    Northern Lights College is an institution that provides post-secondary education to residents of Northern British Columbia. It currently has campuses and access centers in eight communities across the northern third of British Columbia, with Regional Administration located on the Dawson Creek campus. NLC has a working agreement with the University of Northern British Columbia.[2] The college President and CEO (Oct. 2015) is Dr. Bryn Kulmatycki.

    List of campuses[edit]

    List of Access Centres[edit]

    Programs[edit]

    Northern Lights College offers programs in the following areas:

    • Trades and Apprenticeships
    • University Arts and Sciences/ Academic
    • Business Management/Applied Business Technology[3]
    • Career and College Preparation/ Upgrading
    • Workforce Training/Continuing Education
    • Oil & Gas Training
    • Clean Energy Technologies - Wind Turbine Maintenance
    • Early Childhood Education and Care/ Education Assistant
    • Teacher Training
    • Practical Nursing/Health Care Assistant
    • Aircraft Maintenance Engineering

    Aboriginal services[edit]

    Northern Lights College has Aboriginal Gathering Spaces located at the following campuses: Dawson Creek, Fort St. John, Chetwynd and Fort Nelson.

    The Fort Nelson Gathering Space opened in 2009, while the remaining Gathering Spaces opened in 2011.

    The opening of the Chetwynd Gathering Space was highlighted by the attendance of then Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, Steven L. Point.[4]

    Scholarships and bursaries[edit]

    The Northern Lights College Foundation is the recipient of funds held in trust for various awards for education. Formed in 1981, the Foundation\'s objectives are:

    1. to foster community interest in promoting higher education and training
    2. to act as a recipient of trust funds in the form of monies or other properties
    3. to assist in community projects and promotion of higher education and to grant monies to Northern Lights College for the designated use of scholarships and bursaries to be awarded to students.

    The Government of Canada sponsors an Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool that lists over 680 scholarships, bursaries, and other incentives offered by governments, universities, and industry to support Aboriginal post-secondary participation. Northern Lights College scholarships for Aboriginal, First Nations and Métis students include Awards for Aboriginal Women [5]

    \'Northern

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/education/post-secondary-education/institution-resources-administration/accountability-framework/iapr/2016-17/nlc_iapr_2016-17.pdf
    2. ^\'Music at Community Colleges\' in The Encyclopedia of Music in Canada
    3. ^\'Northern Lights College Programs\'.
    4. ^\'Lieutenant Governor opens Aboriginal Gathering Space at NLC\'s Chetwynd Campus\'. Northern Lights College. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
    5. ^Aboriginal Bursaries Search Tool

    All facts, unless otherwise stated, are from Northern Lights College\'s web site:

    External links[edit]

    Retrieved from \'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Northern_Lights_College&oldid=920485513\'
    ...'>Northern Lights College(15.03.2020)