Community college leaders know their institutions must be involved in driving and diversifying the local economy. To do this, community colleges are partnering with local businesses and industries in myriad ways. In New York, the state program Start-Up NY has so far helped 61 state colleges and universities — including more than a dozen community […]
Skills Gap Articles
Massachusetts Needs More STEM Graduates
Not long ago, officials in Massachusetts were not terribly concerned about the state’s public college and university system. “The thought was, unlike other states, we have these prestigious private institutions; we don’t need to have the best public system,” says Katy Abel, associate commissioner for external affairs of the Massachusetts Department of Higher Education. Herein […]
Nursing Program Just for Veterans
Military veterans are returning to civilian life with marketable skills, but they often need gap training and education to turn what they learned during their time in the military into a job. For example, military medics who receive additional training can fill in-demand nursing jobs. Beginning in March 2015, Joliet Junior College (JJC) in Illinois […]
A Bright Future in Manufacturing
The middle-skills gap is a stubborn workforce problem that community colleges across the country are attacking in a number of different ways. Case in point: An increasing number of community colleges are partnering with local industries to create advanced manufacturing centers, which offer real-world factory training. Through these centers, community colleges are providing employers with […]
Michigan Provides Funds for Community College Training Equipment
Michigan Governor Rick Snyder’s dedication to community colleges began when he took community college courses in high school to the cut the cost of his college education. This fall, he received an associate of arts degree from Kellogg Community College thanks to the dual-enrollment and reverse-transfer credits he’d earned. As governor, Snyder knows that community […]
Partnership Helps Businesses Create STEM Internships
When Southern Arizona manufacturers explained their dire need for workers with both classroom training and industry experience, a group of local higher education and high school administrators listened. Then they got to work helping industry partners create science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) internship programs through which students could gain the skills and experience these […]
Free Retraining for the Newly Unemployed
Community colleges have a long history of serving the needs of their communities. One critical way they do this is by retraining workers whose skills no longer match what local employers need. Case in point: Through the On Ramp program, the Virginia Community College System is providing funding to state community colleges to retrain dislocated […]
Tips from a Leader in Clean-Energy Training
Clean energy is a growing power source in this country. A U.S. Department of Energy report estimates that wind power alone could produce 20 percent of the country’s electricity by 2030; it accounted for 1.8 percent of electricity in 2009. And installation of solar photovoltaics is booming this year, according to Renewable Energy World. This means […]
Partnership to Increase Biomedicine Graduates
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) wants more minority and low-income students to study bioscience and move into biomedical research careers. Wayne County Community College District (WCCCD) and three other Detroit-area colleges and universities are helping NIH meet that goal. Starting in the summer of 2015, students who start a biomedical degree program at one […]
Economic Growth, Economic Prosperity, and the new WIOA
In the wake of President Obama signing the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act into law July 22 and as Vice President Biden releasing his action plan for a more effective, job-driven training system, it’s worth taking stock of how the country and its workforce are faring in the recovery. There is much to celebrate. Unemployment […]