Focusing on the Future

Please let me take a moment of your time to introduce myself and the Precision Manufacturing program at Pike Central High School. My name is Mark Scott and I am a full-time instructor for Vincennes University. In the summer of 2010, I was given the opportunity to coordinate with PCHS personnel to implement and teach the courses at Pike Central High School.

Perhaps you have seen recent stories on the CBS Evening News, Bill O'Reilly on Fox News, and articles in the Wall Street Journal addressing the critical shortage of skilled technicians in most industries. The Precision Manufacturing program was implemented in the Fall of 2010 to meet the needs of local and regional industries and to give our graduates additional employment opportunities. This program prepares students for successful entry into the work force or into the Vincennes University programs of Advanced Manufacturing, Tool and Die, or Plastic Injection Mold Tooling.

The courses within the Precision Manufacturing program are actual VU courses, so students earn both high school credits and college credits of up to 15 hours at NO EXPENSE. These courses would cost over $170 per credit hour, which would save students over $2500 if enrolled in the two-year program on campus. Essentially, their core classes for the first semester are completed before they even arrive on campus.

Classes at PCHS meet daily in a three-hour block in the new, state-of-the-art facility utilizing both manual and CNC machining equipment.

Skilled technicians who are seeking employment in manufacturing have nearly a 100% placement rate. Employment opportunities exist locally, regionally, statewide and even across the United States. Examples of employment opportunities include automotive, aerospace, plastics, orthopedic/ health care/ life sciences, stamping, energy, motorsports, and other manufacturing industries.

Those who graduate from the above-mentioned VU programs start out earning $35,000 to $40,000 annually and can quickly increase that to $50,000 to $75,000+ as they gain experience. The program offered at Pike Central gives students a head start into dynamic jobs.

Anyone interested in the Precision Manufacturing program at PCHS and would like more information may Email me at mscott@pcsc.k12.in.us.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Dual-Credit Course Offers Head Start

Thanks to Claire Moorman for this article she wrote for the Jasper Herald. It was published on June 18, 2012.

Dual-credit course offers head start
By CLAIRE MOORMAN
Herald Staff Writer

Vincennes University and the Patoka Valley Career and Technical Education Center are working together to introduce more southern Indiana students to the field of precision manufacturing.

The partners brought a dual-credit manufacturing course to Pike Central High School in 2010 with the goal of giving local students a head start into the VU precision manufacturing program and sending them into the world of robotics, industrial maintenance and product design.

With Jasper Engines & Transmissions in Jasper, a Toyota plant in Princeton, a Subaru plant in Lafayette and a Honda plant in Greensburg, skilled tradespeople are much needed in the state, said Art Haase, dean of the VU Technology Division.

“I graduated roughly 60 students in manufacturing (in 2012). If I had graduated 600 students, I still would not have met the job demands,” Haase said.

The Pike Central manufacturing program was opened to students from schools throughout the surrounding area last school year.

For the 2011-12 year, the program had 12 participants, including two students from Forest Park High School, one from Jasper High School and one from Northeast Dubois High School. The program is open to juniors and seniors and includes three morning classes per day for first-year students and three afternoon classes each day for second-year students. Program instructor and VU professor Mark Scott explained that the large block of time is necessary for effective training, and students who participate must dedicate much of their high school time to learning the trade.

Both Haase and Glenn Weil, Patoka Valley Career and Technical Education director, say that manufacturing careers are often misunderstood, but they stressed that an education in the trade can be just as beneficial as a traditional four-year degree.

“There’s just that stigma that manufacturing is dark and dirty and ugly,” Weil said. “I’m trying so hard to crack whatever code it is to relay the message to the proper students that these jobs are equivalent in pay, benefits, security and even self-fulfillment as college degrees. The men and women that are doing precision machining today are making great wages. There is particular enjoyment in making something that you can see.”

Haase explained that the dual-credit program will produce highly skilled technicians, not just assembly line workers.

“The emphasis is that the graduates of the program are in a white coat job. They are working on computers, programming automated equipment,” he said.

The high school course, which mirrors the material taught in the first semester of the VU manufacturing degree program, is hosted in a recently constructed wing of Pike Central High School and is taught by VU professor Mark Scott. The school has three new computer numeric controlled mills and two new lathes, as well as 15 to 20 older, manual machines to give students hands-on training. The machines are the same models used by big manufacturing companies in the state.

“They’ve got a well-stocked program. We’re really happy and proud of what we’ve got over there,” Weil said.

Students from other area schools must provide their own transportation to the classes, but the class provides free college credit hours. Weil said that with the cost of college on the rise, the opportunity to earn college credit at a public high school is valuable.

Students who complete the program have the option of continuing on in the VU degree or taking an entry-level machining position.

Haase, Weil and Scott all hope to see more students from nearby schools enroll in the future. So far, about 17 students have registered for the coming school year. The program ideally can handle about 30 total students.

“I think we’ve come a long way in two years. The biggest challenge is involvement and career awareness. There are lots of opportunities jobwise with companies of all different sizes,” Scott said.

Interested students should email Scott at mscott@pcsc.k12.in.us

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

nice to see the students are still interested in manufacturing jobs.