Let me tell you right now that as someone who's been a tech and on the hiring end of things, having a tech school on your resume won't impress anyone. An employer will take a grad from a college - even if he didn't major in IT - over one from a tech school any day.
Why? 2 reasons:
#1: You may not understand this now, or you may feel it's bullsh!t, but you NEED a well rounded college education. There is more to a successful tech career than just knowing the tech. You will need organizational skills, business skills, math skills (outside of tech math), management skills (even if you don't want to be management, or if you never are management, you will someday have to manage people anyway - it's inevitable), you need to be well read so you can go to a meeting or an office party and talk like you're an intelligent human being and not just a l33t geek.
Let me explain that I did not finish college. I took one year of college, and got very frustrated that I was "wasting time" paying to learn cr@p that I didn't feel I needed to know. What the hell did I need a Psychology class for? What the hell did I need with an introduction to business management? Why would I care about people skills when I was going to be working on machines?
So I dropped out because I was making damn good money working as a stage hand and sound engineer for an Audio Visual company part time, and it seemed like I was getting a lot better education on the job while making good money.
Well eventually I had to teach myself to manage people. Teach myself to write contracts and job proposals. Teach myself to interview job applicants. Teach myself to do office work. Teach myself business administration. Teach myself the VERY difficult task of firing someone (it sucks). I learned to read poetry and classic works and history so I could have something intelligent to talk about with business execs and prospective clients at meetings, luncheons or dinners without sounding like a moron or talking "shop". I run my own business now and I curse the day I laughed at that business administration course - every damn time I work on my company books or have to call my accountant for advice.
Yeah, I managed, but it was painful with a LOT of pitfalls and it would have been a LOT easier and a lot less stressful in the long run if I had gotten a well-rounded college education. I now regret not having had a proper college education and I toy with the idea of going back to school someday and finally finishing what I started.
Don't get me wrong - the real world experience is invaluable, but you NEED a college education - especially in today's workplace.
Moreover, by choosing a tech school instead of college gives a very bad impression on a resume to most employers. Trust me, employers are NOT impressed that you went to tech school instead of college. It's a mark against you right from the start of the interview.
If you and an identical twin both interviewed for the same position and the only difference between you was that one of you went to tech school and the other to college, I guarantee you the one who went to college would get the job. I would certainly pick the college grad. I would know that I'm not only getting a l33t geek, but I'm also getting someone who has at least been introduced to MOST of the basic survival skills of the modern workplace - someone who can not only fix a PC, but answer the phone, type a memo, talk to a customer, re-load the stapler without jamming it, and put the toilet paper on the dispenser facing the right direction.
#2: Tech schools generally suck. Sorry it's true. Yeah, there are some exceptions, but generally they suck. HOWEVER, even more important, people who hire IT applicants ALL believe tech schools suck. In particular ITT sucks (at least in South Florida). About 50% of the people I interviewed for IT positions at my company went to ITT Tech and let me pretty much quote the typical interview for you (true quotes here BTW):
ME: "So, I see you went to ITT and studied computer technology. Were you always interested in computers?"
APPLICANT: "Oh no. I fix golf cart motors for a living, but I figure I need to get a better job than that eventually, and computers seem to be a big deal right now."
ME: "Can you tell me what a LAN network is?"
APPLICANT: "Wait, I know this, but I always get WAN and LAN confused. One is bigger than the other, right?"
ME: "On this motherboard, can you point out the RAM?"
APPLICANT: "The ones I'm used to look like these things here, except the ones in class were mounted at a 45 degree angle, but they look right."
ME: Can you just generally explain the difference between software and hardware?
APPLICANT: One is soft, and the other is hard.... ware.
I'm not making this stuff up. I wish I was. Maybe these guys were smarter than that, and if they'd gone to college they would at least have been taught how to act at a job interview.
We never hired anyone from a tech school. All Tech school grads flunked the basic verbal "let me see if you anything at all" 4 question test above. I wouldn't waste anymore time on them after that.
No pressure. Good luck!