National Technical Institute

National Technical Institute

Educational institution 4.80(98 reviews) 9001 Jameel Rd, Houston, TX 77040, United States

Photos of National Technical Institute

National Technical Institute
National Technical Institute

National Technical Institute business numbers & email addresses

Email addresses

Not available.

Phone number
+13462458705

Location & directions

9001 Jameel Rd, Houston, TX 77040, United States

Service hours

SaturdayClosed
SundayClosed
Monday8 AM–9 PM
Tuesday8 AM–9 PM
Wednesday8 AM–9 PM
Thursday8 AM–9 PM
Friday8 AM–9 PM

Customer experiences

Victor PerezVictor Perez

Great school!!! I enrolled in the welding program not knowing anything about welding. I’m now 8-months in and have gotten really comfortable. The instructors are very knowledgeable and are motivated to help. During my term, we had two field trips to weld testing facilities in order to know what to expect when having to test for a job opportunity. Big thanks to Mr. B and Jeff for all their hard work, dedication and patience.

Chase ArmstrongChase Armstrong

This is absolutely insane. This school is entirely a joke. They have 2 cameras in each classroom and can’t have any in the back parking lot. My truck got broken into in broad daylight, with a cop driving around. There are no cameras in the back lot which is a huge concern even though they have a million cameras inside the school. They take your money and don’t even care about the students safety. We still haven’t received our tools and we’re 3 months in and the fact I pay full and get zero help. I wouldn’t recommend this school for anyone I have 17 months of this bullshit and I’m already livid. DONT GO HERE. This a concern for everyone’s safety. I’m absolutely livid and the school won’t help or do anything about it. Saying they’ve been trying to get cameras back there and nothing has happened. If you look on the schools website they make 20+ million a year and can’t afford to buy cameras to protect their students. So disappointed in this school.

Julio GonzalezJulio Gonzalez

The worst possible school you could ever decide to attend to. All they care about is money. Despite making so much money from the students attending, none of it seems to be invested into the school to make it better for its students. I graduated from the aviation program and got my A&P, but it felt like it was from my own merit because the curriculum feels very outdated, and they don't actually prepare you to take the real test. You learn history about aviation and get a general knowledge over different systems but half the time you're just watching YouTube videos which you could've done from home for free. The staff is horrible with getting any useful information and the financial aid department is always making mistakes. I'm a veteran who utilized my GI Bill and I was consistently charged extra from the way the financial aid department handled my account. Had to have an audit completed by them to find their mistake and fix my balance. My monthly BAH was never consistent either. Save yourself the headache and find an alternate way of working for your A&P. Many airlines offer apprenticeship programs where you can work towards your license. Bottom line, avoid this school at all costs unless you want to deal with headaches and spend over 45K for your license

Esmeralda RománEsmeralda Román

This school is hard to get a hold of administration as a student. My partner has been trying to contact them to schedule his General Testing as an aviation mechanic student and nobody has reached back to him in weeks. He has contacted multiple times. The same thing happens when he has to make a payment for his tuition monthly. He can only go to evening classes and there is absolutely no office hours at that time, so only the day classes get the best opportunity for any administration contact. Someone can at least refill the coffee machine for the evening students after they just got out of work and have to be at school the rest of the day. He also has been expecting to have more hands on work, but most of the equipment needed to learn aviation mechanics is either broken, or they don’t have enough for everyone to work on something. Your best bet is getting an internship to start learning the real work, which not everyone can do. With all the tuition and fees these students need to pay in the aviation program, you would think they at least would have equipment to work on and enough teachers available. At least two have quit in the middle of the year and now the Dean has to teach. So far, the Dean has been the only good teacher.

National Technical Institute is a educational institution.

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