
New Hands-On Production Course at NPCollege Preps Students for the Pros
By:
Brandon Costa, Senior Editor
Tuesday, February 19, 2013 - 10:25 am
Ofelia De La Torre wanted to give it another shot.
Five years ago, as part of a group of investors headed up
Rolando Nichols, who formerly provided Spanish play-by-play for
the MLB’s Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, De La Torre worked as a
recruiter for a new bilingual broadcasting school in the Los
Angeles area.
Its aim was to grant opportunities to local youth to work behind
the scenes on live television productions. New students of the
program had the chance to work on ESPN’s X Games broadcasts and
various Fox Sports broadcasts in the area. The school was even
on the verge of formal accreditation.
Then came the economic recession of 2008. Federal agencies cut
back on new approvals of financial aid, students struggled to
afford the course and dropped out, and the budding school was
forced to shut its doors.
De La Torre, a broadcasting professional with more than 25
years’ experience mostly in the Los Angeles market, didn’t want
to give up on giving promising young members of the community –
including L.A.’s Latino population – a chance to be a part of
the industry that has meant so much to her.
Students get the chance to work with professional equipment,
including in the control room built around a Ross Video Vision
3M switcher.

Students get the chance to work with professional equipment, including in the control room built around a Ross Video Vision 3M switcher.
After a few years, Nichols, De La Torre, and the team brushed
themselves off and turned to a local institution to bring their
dream back to life. Nichols spoke with a representative from
National Polytechnic College (NPCollege), an accredited
institution in Commerce, CA, that specializes in postsecondary
occupational instruction. The Los Angeles-are school is open to
all but offers numerous bilingual opportunities to assist the
area’s Latino population.
Together, they developed a curriculum and, utilizing the studios
of Centro Net Productions, were able to make it possible. The
two sides came to an agreement, and, this month, PCollege’s
first graduating class of the Media Technical Production course
headed out into the work force.
At less than a year old, the school is catching the attention of
the local television industry.
“We can’t churn out enough graduates,” says De La Torre.
“Everybody [in the industry] says the same thing: people are not
qualified enough to handle [the equipment]. They have to give a
lot of training. So they are looking to our school [because] our
students learn the whole gamut.”
NPCollege’s new satellite campus in Torrance, a city in the
South Bay region of Los Angeles County, is generating a lot of
buzz thanks to its exciting new course.
NPCollege students spend the first eight months of the Media
Technical Production course getting to wear all of the hats in a
live studio production. In the final month, they get to
specialize in the field of their choice.

NPCollege students spend the first eight months of the Media Technical Production course getting to wear all of the hats in a live studio production. In the final month, they get to specialize in the field of their choice.
In the Media Technical Production course, students get the
opportunity to work hands-on with HD production gear in a fully
functional studio. They learn the elements of media production:
camera work, lighting for studio and field, editing, recording
systems, audio and communications, broadcast signals,
interviewing techniques, and hosting and reporting. The
nine-month course centers on production of a daily 30-minute
news-style studio program.
Chief Engineer Jaime Hernandez, who works for Centro Net
Productions on video commercials, live shows, and postproduction
videos in the Los Angeles area, designed the facilities and
studio. He also works with ESPN on X Games in Aspen and Los
Angeles and often takes some of his top NPCollege students with
him to work on professional live broadcasts.
“For me, it’s about giving others an opportunity,” says
Hernandez. “We have the studio, we have the infrastructure. [We
see] somebody come in with no clue not only in what we do but
where they want to go and, by the end of the nine months, see a
group of those [forming] a television crew, knowing their place,
knowing how to operate. It gives you a lot of satisfaction. It
lets you know that you, in some way, contributed to making a
person’s future a bit brighter.”
The course’s HD studio is loaded with some of the latest
live-video-production equipment. The control is built around a
Ross Video Vision 3M switcher (the studio also has a Grass
Valley Zodiak SD switcher that is used on occasion). The control
room and set also include a Ross HD-SDI routing system, NewTek’s
3Play for playback, JVC 790U cameras (used both in the studio
and in the field), AJA and Harris frame syncs, and a Yamaha PM5D
audio board. All recording is done to a set of AJA Ki Pros.
Students spend the first eight months of the course getting to
wear all the hats in a live studio production. That includes
getting to interact with all the equipment on a daily basis.
During the course’s final month, students are allowed to
specialize in whatever facet they like most.
Combining the course’s hands-on nature with the chance to work
with seasoned industry professionals like Hernandez and De La
Torre gives students a unique opportunity to sharpen the skills
needed to flourish in a live production environment.
“I tell students that they have to get to the point where they
[can] react,” says Hernandez. “If you [have to] think, you’re
too late, especially in the sports world and in live
television.”
The course’s first crop of approximately 20 students just
finished the program’s first nine-month track, and a new wave of
about 15 students began their trip through the curriculum last
week. For those who join this new venture, the school offers
opportunities that even some major broadcasting schools can’t
offer: the chance to shadow and work in the field on
professional broadcasts.
“The opportunity to go out into the field with us and do real
shows: that is the huge advantage,” says Hernandez. “Also, the
fact that they have a full, functioning studio to use. A lot of
other schools may have a studio, but the students aren’t allowed
to disconnect equipment and move equipment or reroute or repatch.
That’s usually left up to the instructors. We allow them to do
that. The experience they get is such an advantage.”
It’s experience NPCollege hopes continues to land its students
jobs that pave the way for successful broadcasting careers.
NPCOLLEGE received the approval from the California Tax Education Council (CTEC) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to teach Tax Preparer Certification Courses and Tax Continuing Education courses.
FOR NEW TAX PREPARERS
Our Tax Preparer Certification
Course fulfills the 60-hour “qualifying
education” requirement imposed by the State of California to
become a tax preparer. The course will be offered to all our
Computerized Accounting students as part of their program, and
to the general public as well.
Upon completion of the course, the students will be qualified to register in California with CTEC as a tax preparer. The student will complete 45 hrs of Federal Tax Hours and 15 hrs of California Tax Hours required by CTEC. NPCollege will provide a Certificate of Completion of the Tax course once the student completes the required hours.
This Basic Tax Course will consist of 19 lessons for the Federal Tax and 19 lessons for California tax covering the basic areas of income tax preparation for individuals. At the beginning of every lesson the instructor will provide the students with the correspondent training material, and will administer the correspondent exercises and quizzes. This is an instructor guide course with emphasis on hands on exercises using the tax forms and Turbo Tax Home and Enterprise Edition.
A listing of additional requirements to register as a tax preparer may be obtained by contacting CTEC at P.O. Box 2890, Sacramento, CA, 95812-2890, toll-free by phone at (877) 850-2832, or on the Internet at www.ctec.org. Contact Internal Revenue Service (IRS) toll-free by phone at 1-800-829-1040, or on line at http://www.irs.gov/taxpros/ .
FOR REGISTERED TAX RETURN PREPARERS - CTEC and IRS Continuing Education Courses
IRS EXAM REVIEW Course will prepare you for the
IRS Competency Test to renew your PTIN. This instructor guided
course will be taught in 2sessions of 5 hrs per day. You will
have the opportunity to overview the Competency exam structure
and know the different strategies to pass the exam. Upon
completion of this course the student will receive an IRS
approved certificate of completion.
15 hrs Federal Requirement Course
This course satisfies the new IRS 15-hour federal education
requirements and enhances your tax expertise. NPCollege will
provide an approved IRS Certificate of Completion once the
student completes the required hours.
20 hrs California Requirement Course This course satisfies the CTEC and IRS continuing education requirements. This course is intended to completely fulfill the new 2012 license/registration requirements for tax practitioners in California and the new IRS requirements. Passing students will be issued a certificate for the IRS 15-hour continuing education requisite and one for the CTEC 20 hr requisite.
Tax Preparer Certification Course – 60 Hour
Qualifying Education – CTEC Approved
CTEC # 3000-QE-0001
Our school just received approval from the California Tax Education Council (CTEC) to begin teach a Tax Preparer Certification Course. This course will be offered as part of our current Computerized Accounting program to all new students and this Tax Preparer Certification Course will be offered to the public in the near future.
National Polytechnic College has been approved by the
California Tax Education Council to offer the Tax preparer
Certification Course, which fulfills the 60-hour “qualifying
education” requirement imposed by the State of California to
become a tax preparer. A listing of additional requirements to
register as a tax preparer may be obtained by contacting CTEC at
P.O. Box 2890, Sacramento, CA, 95812-2890, toll-free by phone at
(877) 850-2832, or on the Internet at www.ctec.org
Upon completion of the Tax Preparer Certification Course, the
students who enrolled in the Computerized Accounting Program
will be qualified to register with the California Tax Education
Council as a tax preparer. The student will complete 45 hrs of
Federal Tax Hours and 15 hrs of California Tax Hours required
for the certification. NPC will provide a Certificate of
Completion of the Tax course once the student completes the
required hours.
This Basic Tax Course will consist of 19 lessons for the Federal
Tax and 19 lessons for California tax covering the basic areas
of income tax preparation for individuals. At the beginning of
every lesson the instructor will provide the students with the
correspondent training material, and will administer the
correspondent exercises and quizzes. This is an instructor guide
course with emphasis on hands on exercises using the tax forms
and Turbo Tax Home and Enterprise Edition.
Prerequisites: no previous requisites.
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