The SICT will build 17 technological high schools in 11 states across the country / @SICT_mx >>>

#SICT.- The Government of Mexico, through the Ministry of Infrastructure, Communications, and Transportation (SICT), will launch an ambitious Educational Infrastructure program with the construction of 17 Technological Baccalaureate schools in 11 municipalities, distributed across 11 states.

This effort is being carried out in coordination with the Ministry of Public Education (SEP) and state governments, benefiting more than 759,000 people.

The new upper secondary education schools will be geared toward training young people in highly specialized technological fields, with the goal of promoting professional and economic development in the regions where they will be established.

An investment of approximately 853.4 million pesos will be allocated for these projects, and they will be built in the states of Baja California, Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Jalisco, Yucatán, the State of Mexico (in six municipalities), Chihuahua, Puebla, Nuevo León (in two municipalities), Querétaro, and Oaxaca.

Regarding this project, Secretary Jesús Antonio Esteva Medina has emphasized in various forums that the SICT enthusiastically assumes this responsibility, as it once again has the authority to develop educational infrastructure, as it did in the past when it was the Secretariat of Public Works (SOP) or the Secretariat of Human Settlements and Public Works (SAHOP).

«The SICT is resuming these functions it once exercised, not only in the areas of roads, airports, and ports, but also in the construction of civil infrastructure such as educational facilities,» he stated.

The new technological baccalaureates will be located in:

Baja California: Tijuana (103,956 beneficiaries)
Guanajuato: León (97,049)
Hidalgo: Tizayuca (11,151)
Jalisco: El Salto (15,402)
Yucatán: Mérida (47,706)
Nuevo León: Juárez (29,408) and García (22,877)
State of Mexico: Chalco (24,426), Chimalhuacán (39,394), Ecatepec (78,175), Ixtapaluca (31,446), Nezahualcóyotl (49,558), and Texcoco (15,487)
Chihuahua: Juárez (89,309)
Puebla: Cuautlancingo (88,078)
Querétaro: El Marqués (12,538)
Oaxaca: San Blas Atempa (3,939)

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