Loading AI tools
Nonprofit adult education and job training organization From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Opportunities Industrialization Center (usually shortened to “OIC” and doing business as OIC of America, Inc. and OIC International, Inc.) is a nonprofit adult education and job training organization headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,[1] with offices located in New Haven, Connecticut, Washington, D.C., and Burma Camp, Accra, Ghana.
Company type | Nonprofit |
---|---|
Industry | Education |
Founded | January 26, 1964 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
Founder | Leon Sullivan |
Headquarters | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , United States |
Number of locations | 38 (United States) 20 (international) |
Area served | United States |
Key people | Sheila Ireland (President/CEO) |
Services | GED testing Job training |
Website | www |
Founded in 1964, OIC operates 38 affiliated centers in 22 states in the US and 20 international centers in Africa, Haiti and Poland, according to its website. These are designed to provide General Education Development studies and workforce development courses focused on helping economically disadvantaged persons, minority communities, and adults and adolescents seeking to complete or resume their education and obtain employment.
Renee Cardwell Hughes became CEO of OIC in January 2020,[2] succeeding Dr. Kevin R. Johnson. Leon Sullivan was OIC's founder.
As of 2018, OIC website stated it operated "over 30 affiliated centers, 22 in the US and 20 international centers in Africa, Haiti and Poland".[1][self-published source?] A November 1999 article in the New York Times stated it operated "70 branches nationwide and 46 in 18 other countries."[3] The 2021 website of OIC America listed five programs:
Its schools/facilities usually have OIC in the name, such as "Summit Academy OIC",[5] "American Indian OIC".
OIC was founded on 1964, by Leon Sullivan, a civil rights leader and pastor of the Zion Baptist Church in Philadelphia with an education and job training facility to help African Americans. Its first facility was a converted former jailhouse on 19th and Oxford Streets in North Philadelphia. The program was developed to provide job training and instruction in life skills to disadvantaged and disenfranchised peoples with few prospects, and helped place participants into the workforce. Sullivan discovered that thousands of African Americans and other Philadelphia residents in lower-income communities were unemployed, despite a surplus in job vacancies during that time. This led to the launch of a "selective patronage" campaign, i.e. a boycott against Philadelphia-area companies that were not practicing equal opportunity in employment.[6][7]
Renovations to the dilapidated building were funded through donations from community organizers and citizens, and through a grant given by an anonymous donor. The programs provided by the Philadelphia center were replicated in other American cities, which provided employment training and job placement for economically disadvantaged, unemployed and unskilled people of all races. In 1969, Sullivan's concept led to the formation of the Opportunities Industrialization Centers International (OICI), which would expand its services to international communities based on the "self-help" philosophy that Sullivan founded OIC upon. In 1970, Sullivan established OIC of America, Inc. to serve as a national organization that would associated with OIC affiliate campuses across the United States and provide technical assistance centers for areas where the OIC model was replicated.[8][9]
Although OIC does not serve Black people exclusively, its history as part of the civil rights protests of the 1960s and a boycott to help desegregate white businesses in Philadelphia,[9] was continued in the 1970s with a Pan-African effort to help establish facilities in several African countries, "with the collective cultural capital and philanthropy raised by the people themselves in Nigeria, Ghana, Ethiopia, Kenya, and other nations".[10]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.