Borough of Manhattan Community College is introducing a new Senior Renaissance Series of Adult and Continuing Education programs this spring.
The City University of New York honored two Borough of Manhattan Community College Professors, Annie Han and Y-Chun Tricia Lin for their scholarship on December 10. Han, an assistant professor of mathematics, and Lin, an assistant professor of English at Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC), were among a select group of scholars who were...
The City University of New York honored Borough of Manhattan Community College Professor Patricia Wilkinson for her scholarship on December 10. A professor of mathematics and chairperson of the department at Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC), Wilkinson was among a select group of scholars who were recognized at a "Salute to Scholars" reception at...
Acté Maldonado, dean of Adult and Continuing Education at Borough of Manhattan Community College, received the first-ever Leadership Award from the Continuing Education Association of New York.
The Trinidad and Tobago Alliance and the Trinidad and Tobago Ex-Police Association have awarded scholarships to four Borough of Manhattan Community College students
New York, NY—Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and Dr. Antonio Pérez, president of Borough of Manhattan Community College, called for continued support of the Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Technical Education Act. The Perkins Act funds a host of vocational and technical programs at high schools and colleges.
Antonio Perez, president of Borough of Manhattan Community College, has been appointed to the World Trade Center Memorial Committee by the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation.
The college in lower Manhattan lost the use of a building at 30 West Broadway in the September 11 attack on the World Trade Center. To make up for lost classroom space, the college transformed the student lounge, a large gathering room, the fitness center, and most of the cafeteria into classrooms. It also installed...
More than ever, community college students – particularly older students – appeal to recruiters at some of the country’s most prestigious four-year colleges, because of their maturity, diversity of experience, and motivation
Borough of Manhattan Community College has received a $738,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under a nursing workforce diversity initiative.