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Opportunities Industrialization Center

Opportunities Industrialization Center
Company typeNonprofit
IndustryEducation
FoundedJanuary 26, 1964; 60 years ago (1964-01-26) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
FounderLeon Sullivan
Headquarters
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
,
United States
Number of locations
38 (United States)
20 (international)
Area served
United States
Key people
Sheila Ireland
(President/CEO)
ServicesGED testing
Job training
Websitewww.oicofamerica.org

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.

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.

Sheila Ireland, President and CEO of OIC Philadelphia since 2022, is a visionary leader with over 25 years of experience in workforce development and community empowerment. Her career spans non-profit, healthcare, consulting, government, and manufacturing sectors, bringing a wealth of knowledge to her current role. Under Ireland's leadership, OIC Philadelphia has experienced remarkable growth, increasing programs by 250% from 4 to 14 offerings, doubling both the fundraising budget and participants served. Her collaborative approach brings together diverse stakeholders to create a more effective workforce development ecosystem in North Philadelphia. Prior to OIC Philadelphia, Ireland served as Deputy Secretary of Workforce Development for Pennsylvania's Department of Labor and Industry, overseeing a $270 million budget and 600 employees. As Executive Director of Workforce Development for Philadelphia, she managed the city's first comprehensive strategy, "Fueling Philadelphia's Talent Engine." Ireland's expertise in coordinating between local government, educational institutions, training programs, employers, and service providers has been instrumental in creating opportunities for vulnerable populations. Her innovative approaches to workforce development have consistently improved organizational performance and achieved tangible results across various sectors.

Programs

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."[2] The 2021 website of OIC America listed five programs:

  • Vocational training – "a core element of OIC's mission";[3] for both unemployed and those who have a job and want a better one; "helps lower-skilled workers learn new skills and earn industry-recognized credentials".
  • Work readiness – "effective communication, problem solving, resume building, interviewing, and job search skills".
  • SOAR (skills and opportunities for achievement and responsibility) program to reintegrate into society people released from prison and prevent recidivism. Provides "relationship development to intensive case management, academic support, vocational training and credentialing, job placement, and long-term follow-up services". A "structured, yet holistic approach".
  • Education – offers "adult basic education, GED preparation and/or testing services" for students such as " over-age, under-credentialed students" who never got a high school diploma but need GED for a job or further training.
  • Youth development – "engaging" youth "to recognize, utilize, and enhance their strengths."
  • Healthcare – OIC offers vocational training in employment areas such as certified nursing assistant, but also offers "comprehensive, affordable, healthcare".

Its schools/facilities usually have OIC in the name, such as "Summit Academy OIC",[4] "American Indian OIC".

History

Origins

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.[5][6]

Expansion

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.[7][8]

Programs in Africa

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,[8] 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".[9]

References

  1. ^ a b "OIC Opportunities Industrialization Center". oicinternational.org. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  2. ^ Hoffman., Jan (3 November 1999). "A Civil Rights Crusader Takes On the World". New York Times.
  3. ^ "Vocational Training. Overview". oicofamerica.org. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  4. ^ https://saoic.org/
  5. ^ "Sullivan, Leon Howard Jr. (1922-2001)". BlackPast.org. 21 April 2008. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
  6. ^ Jason T. Bartlett. "Opportunities Industrialization Center (OIC)". The Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
  7. ^ Kendall Wilson (April 27, 2001). "Dr. Leon H. Sullivan built a legacy". Philadelphia Tribune. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
  8. ^ a b Sullivan, Leon H. (Spring–Summer 1986). "From Protest to Progress: The Lesson of the Opportunities Industrialization Centers". Yale Law & Policy Review. 4 (2): 364–374. JSTOR 40239221. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  9. ^ Franklin, V.P. (Winter 2011). "Pan-African Connections, Transnational Education, Collective Cultural Capital, and Opportunities Industrialization Centers International". The Journal of African American History. 96 (1): 51–61. doi:10.5323/jafriamerhist.96.1.0044. JSTOR 10.5323/jafriamerhist.96.1.0044. S2CID 142075897. Retrieved 21 March 2021.

Further reading