The average annual net price that a student who receives federal financial aid pays to cover expenses (e.g. tuition, living expenses, etc.) to attend the school's largest program. Net price is the program's cost of attendance minus any grants and scholarships received. For public schools, this is only the average cost for in-state students. Negative cost values indicate that the average grant/scholarship aid exceeded the cost of attendance.
Madisonville Community College is one of 16 individual colleges which together comprise the Kentucky Community and Technical College System. Maintaining four of its own campus locations, Madisonville primarily services Caldwell, Crittenden, Henderson, Hopkins, McLean, Muhlenberg, and Webster counties in Kentucky.
Madisonville Community College offers the following healthcare-related courses:
The Integrated Nursing program provides a seamless educational curriculum with two exit points allowing you to choose a career as a practical nurse (PN) or registered nurse (RN). There is also a PN to RN track. It will take five (5) semesters to get an associate degree in nursing.
Medical information technology graduates prepare medical records and reports, maintain files, perform accounting procedures, transcribe medical documentation, work with medical insurance and coding, and assist patients and healthcare professionals.
Medical Laboratory Technician are health professionals skilled in both the theory and practice of clinical laboratory procedures that provide data physicians use to determine the absence, presence, extent, and cause of disease. Medical Laboratory Technicians must be accurate, dedicated, skilled and self-motivated.
Mahr Park and Madisonville Community College are teaming up to give agriculture students across several majors hands-on access to working with plants. This comes as a looming shortage of agriculture workers is on the horizon.
A new aviation program at Madisonville Community College will be housed at the Madisonville Regional Airport and will allow students to earn an associate degree and a pilot's license in as little as two years.
A recent pair of federal grants will be used to expand a partnership between Madisonville Community College and local high schools. Through the partnership, students are able to earn dual credits and work toward certification as EMTs. The grant is geared specifically toward creating synchronous, virtual-learning opportunities for high school students.