With numerous classes and majors, sports teams and recreational activities, Mott Community College offers an affordable college experience for Flint area residents. Classes are offered in the mornings, afternoons or after work in the evenings for ultimate flexibility. After earning credits or an associate degree at Mott, credits can be transferred to four-year universities and colleges.
Mott's North Saginaw Street location offers the same services and education as the East Court Street location, and provides the flexibility for those students who live closer to the North Saginaw Street campus.
With a 97 percent graduate employment rate, Baker College provides for its students during and after enrollment. Baker College offers over 140 certificate programs as well as associate, bachelor, master, and doctoral programs to its students. Its program studies include business administration, engineering, health care, information systems, education and culinary arts. Baker also offers online courses and graduate programs.
The University of Michigan has had a campus in Flint since 1956. Local philanthropist Charles Mott (who had the local community college named after him) donated a substantial amount of money to build the UM campus in Flint, and 167 students enrolled in the first semester. Pressing an "open, collaborative process" of learning, UM Flint flaunts its small classes and innovative course studies as major features of its small-town college credentials.