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Advanced Technology Center (ATC)

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Curriculum that meets today's industrial needs ... changes and the economic panorama shifts, little or inconsistent communication ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Advanced Technology Center (ATC)


1
Advanced Technology Center (ATC)
  • El Paso Community College
  • Jose Ricardo Canales, Director

2
Creating the Pathway
  1. Overview
  2. Framing Our Thoughts
  3. Challenges Faced by Higher Education and
    Workforce
  4. Placing Education at the Center
  5. Explaining the Pathway Conceptual Model
  6. Goals of the Process
  7. Conclusion

3
ATC Mission
  • The instruction at the El Paso Community College
    ATC focuses on state-of-the-art cognitive and
    mechanical skills development through
  • Industry-specific training
  • Curriculum that meets today's industrial needs
  • Flexible class scheduling which provides
    opportunities for students to attend classes
    either day, afternoon, evening or weekends
  • Dialog with local and national industry which
    keeps our programs current
  • Staff and faculty of the ATC work in concert with
    economic development agencies and business
    leaders to cultivate partnerships and ensure the
    validity of it's programs and classes

4
Features of the ATC
  • 20M State-of-the-Art Facility
  • Seven (9) areas of learning
  • Distance Learning Lab
  • Certified Lab Assistants
  • Coming soon
  • Online Education
  • Wireless communication
  • Eight (8) student labs
  • Precision Machining
  • Industrial Maintenance
  • Plastics Technology
  • Welding
  • Electrical Journeyman
  • Robotics and Automation
  • Office Technology

5
Benefits to Students
  • Acquire high-technical skills training
  • Skills upgrade
  • Job Placement after completion of program
  • On-site counseling
  • Resource Lab
  • Resumes
  • Access to Internet
  • Online registration
  • Free placement testing
  • Free tutoring

6
Benefits to Community
  • Manufacturing and industrial resources and
    technologies meet the training needs
  • Workforce Development
  • Industry-specific training
  • Partnerships with community and business leaders
  • Opportunities for state-of-the-art instruction
  • Industry-based apprenticeship programs
  • Provide highly-qualified applicants

7
Programs
  • Plastics Technology
  • Precision Machining
  • Electrical Journeyman
  • Industrial Maintenance
  • Welding Processes
  • Robotics and Automation
  • Quality Control
  • ISO
  • Diesel Mechanic

8
Framing our Thoughts
  • To what extent is El Pasos educational entities
    involved in economic development?
  • Are the educational entities presenting a
    seamless, united front as they investigate,
    collaborate, and educate our current and future
    workforce?
  • Do our city/economic officials seek/trust the
    council of the educational entities? Do we have
    a systematic way of doing this? And do we have
    evaluative tools to gauge our success?
  • Is education in El Paso being proactive in new
    and high tech fields and leading the way to new
    innovative business/industrial processes?
  • Do we react to situations and thus limit our
    impact on strategic planning?
  • When we seek funding, are we doing this through
    integrated efforts that consolidate resources
    from EPCC and UTEP/NMSU?
  • Are we communicating? Is it effective?

9
Challenges to Higher Education
  • Traditional institutions are facing shrinking
    budgets and enrollment challenges
  • There are major technological advances in
    education methodology -- the information age is
    here
  • There are shifting demographics in the higher
    education workforce -- graying of the
    instructor/tenured professor
  • There are shifting demographics in the higher
    education student body -- increasing adult and
    minority and off-campus enrollment
  • There is a greater demand by organizations for
    skill-based education to prepare graduates for
    the challenge of the workplace in the global
    marketplace in the new millennium.
  • BOTTOM LINE DO MORE WITH LESS

10
Challenges to Workforce/Voc Ed Programs
  • Challenges within Academic Settings
  • The logical path that connects workforce
    courses with traditional academic tracts is
    either non-existent, or extremely blurred
  • Traditional academia reduces workforce training
    to shop training and tragically is failing to
    see the important relevance that these applied
    courses have to academic areas such as math,
    science, and engineering
  • The value these type of courses add to the
    student, the curriculum and the workplace
  • Training and Research facilities, specifically in
    areas such as engineering are very limited and
    costly
  • Facilities are expensive to build, maintain, and
    properly tool and thus the trend in education is
    to require less hands-on labs and more academic
    type courses
  • We are producing scientists as opposed to
    engineers UTEP faculty

11
Challenges to Workforce/Voc Ed Programs (cont..)
  • Challenges in the Economic Sector
  • As technology changes and the economic panorama
    shifts, little or inconsistent communication is
    given to local future economic expansions
  • As a result education becomes reactive to
    problems, rather than proactive in the planning
    phases and thus becomes a small factor in
    economic development initiatives
  • Social and Cultural Challenges
  • Everyone wants their child to go to college.
    What this really means is they want them to go
    study a four-year career
  • Parents and counselors are pushing 4-year
    academic degrees rather than their definition of
    workforce training
  • Workforce is sent the problem children. Those
    that were deemed by some entity that they would
    not make-it in college (It is seen almost as a
    last chance)
  • Workforce is seen as a step down, rather than as
    an extension of education

12
Placing Education at the Center
  • First step is to create a seamless pathway in our
    educational system
  • Partnerships are the key
  • Education should be at the center of
  • Economic Development

Economic Development
Industry
EPCC
H S
Re- search
4-YR
13
Fundamental Premise
Practical Application
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
RELEVANCE
Academics
Soft Skills
14
Benefits of placing educationat the center
  • When the focus is student success within our
    economic structure
  • This facilitates the creation of policy and
    procedures that allow students to easily transfer
    from one institution to the other
  • Creation of higher levels of evaluative tools
    because our outcomes directly impact industrys
    productivity
  • It aligns the goals and outcomes of education
    with the goals and objectives of business and
    industry
  • Research data becomes the center to economic
    initiatives and the cornerstone to skill
    development and future economic expansions
  • Acquiring national and state resources for
    retooling training centers at all educational
    levels can now be a collaborative effort, rather
    than a competitive one
  • Students are in tune and responsive to the local
    and future workforce needs of the community
  • Programs are launched to meet specific current
    and future needs of the economic sector
  • The pathway to student success would now be a
    pathway that they have choice and that business
    and industry see their success as well

15
Conceptual FrameworkThe Pathway
Level IV
Level V
Level I
Level II
Level III
Level V
Level VI
Level VI
16
Level 1 High SchoolAND EPCC-ATC
  • Introduce Dual Credit to Workforce classes
  • Diesel Mechanic
  • Machining
  • Electrical
  • Robotics and Automation
  • Industrial Maintenance
  • Electronics
  • HS students could begin their technical/pre-engine
    ering degree while still in high school and still
    benefit from our facility
  • Currently working on dual credit pilot program
    with the El Paso Independent School District and
    the Center for Career and Technology Education

17
Level II EPCC/ATC
  • Mainstream ATC courses into existing
    pre-engineering degree plans
  • Include applied coursework or labs into the
    pre-engineering degree plans that adds value to
    the education of our students and value to
    existing course offering
  • Students would now have the choice to either
    continue a technical degree and find a well
    paying job, or move into a pre-engineering degree
    without losing credits

18
Level III EPCC to UTEP/NMSU
  • Articulation agreements are currently in place
    and becoming more prevalent
  • Pre-Engineering articulation is currently being
    negotiated
  • The ATC is currently offering 2 required
    undergraduate labs for senior-level industrial
    engineers
  • Currently planning the expansion of
    undergraduate/graduate Robotics and Automation
    labs, mechanical engineering, electronics and
    expanding industrial engineering labs at the ATC
  • Value of practical hands-on training

19
Level IV - The Graduate Student
  • Research support
  • The ATC and UTEP are currently working on a joint
    National Science Foundation grant to create
    research cells in the ATC facility
  • Areas of research will include Robotics and
    Automation, Industrial Engineering, Electronics,
    Mechanical Engineering and possibly metallurgy
  • In this initiative a high-tech industrial library
    will also be funded to provide research
    capability and support to students and business
    entities alike

20
Level V - Mentoring
  • Doctoral, pre-engineering and High school
    students will have the opportunity to work in
    teams in real world projects that will benefit
    themselves and the community
  • Graduate students will also teach lower-level
    courses as part of their internship

21
Level VI Industrial Incubation Center
  • Logical Outcome of Research cells
  • Open to business/industry to create, test, or
    evaluate existing manufacturing processes
  • Create a direct link to business/industry
  • Create real world opportunities for students to
    work on industrial processes
  • Teams will consist of faculty member, graduate
    student, technical student and possibly high
    school student
  • Community Service

22
Conceptual FrameworkThe Pathway
Level IV
Level II
Level III
Level V
Level I
Level VI
23
Goals of Process
  1. Give students the educational prerogative to
    choose their future
  2. Open communication at levels of education and
    workforce training
  3. Open solid, outcome based communication with
    business/industry
  4. Create community-based evaluative tools
  5. Effectively prepare our students for productive
    employment
  6. Raise the overall skill level of El Paso/Juarez
    Region
  7. Position Education as the center for economic
    development

Business/industry
Academics
Workforce Education
HS/EPCC/ATC/UTEP
24
Conclusion
  • Partnership at all levels is key for overall
    success
  • ATC is partnering with the Center for Career and
    Technology Education and ardently working to
    offer HS students dual credit (pilot program)
  • ATC is partnering with UTEP/CCTE/business and
    industry in the creation of the Robotics and
    automation program
  • ATC is working to partner with Mesilla Valley
    trucking for our Diesel Program
  • ATC WANTS TO PARTNER WITH YOU !!!
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