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The big plusses
of Technical Education
by Lois Carter Fay
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Directory
of technology education in Virginia
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A
typical career path in the business world used to start
with a four-year trip to college followed by a long,
hard slog of on-the-job training. Students didn't realize
the advantages of a technical career until they entered
the work force. Then they came to the sobering realization
that a knack for engineering or computer programming
could be a tad more useful than expertise in the 18th-century
English novel.
Fortunately,
this is America and everyone is free to start over.
You may not be able to recover those lost years spent
sleeping too late and cutting too many classes. But
you can go back to school. Many educational institutions
have adapted their programs to suit the schedules of
busy adults who juggle the demands of career and family.
Today, people of all ages and levels of experience are
heading back to campus - often with the support of their
employers.
Fortunately,
as well, this is Virginia, a state blessed by one of
the finest systems of public education in the country,
supplemented by numerous private colleges and career
schools. A wide array of engineering and information-technology
programs are available in every major city and, thanks
to distance learning and satellite campuses, in smaller
communities as well. You should have little difficulty
finding the right program for you, no matter where you
live.
In
coming years, having technology skills could make the
difference between having a job or not. The global economy
is increasingly differentiating between "head"
countries, where citizens conduct more complex, intellectually
demanding tasks, and "hand" countries where
workers perform more manual and routine labor. Even
traditional sectors such as manufacturing demand greater
intellectual contributions from their employees. The
pressure is likely to intensify as workers in countries
like China and India acquire more skills and education
themselves, creating greater competition for semi-skilled
American workers. "Businesses and industry are
requiring all sorts of standards that workers were not
required to meet five years ago," says Dr. Mark
Q. Emick, Sr., dean, work force development services/lifelong
learning at Virginia Western Community College in Roanoke.
Some
certifications can testify to skills that are widely
in demand, such as a Microsoft Systems Engineer, while
others are tailored to more obscure occupational niches.
Emick at Virginia Western is working with a major manufacturer
to devise a program to certify competence with measurement
devices. "People don't stay in jobs their whole
careers. There's great movement between and among industries,"
he says. Certified skills are valuable to the employer,
but even more so to the employee because they are transferable.
At
the moment, demand for Internet and networking skills
has moderated considerably from 1999, when the Virginia
Governor's Commission on Information Technology estimated
that Virginia had a shortage of between 23,000 and 30,000
IT workers. But technical degrees are still more marketable
than most others. "Information technology continues
to be the engine driving economic growth globally,"
says Dr. Wilbur W. Stanton, founding dean of Radford
University's new College of Information Science and
Technology. Last year there were 12 jobs for every student
graduating with an information technology degree. Although
the economy has slowed since then, he says, this year
it's running three to five jobs per student. "Salaries
were - and still are-skyrocketing, with offers around
$45,000 to $50,000 per year at entry level."
Old
Dominion University delivers distance-learning degrees
across the state through its Teletechnet program. According
to Anne Savage, vice provost for distance learning,
students see a quick payoff. "The impact upon their
salaries is immediate and it can range from $1,000 to
$20,000 increase upon getting the degree," she
says.
Despite
the rewards, going back to school can be agonizing.
Luckily, there are many options for continuing your
education. They include the traditional full-time, four-year
university degree, an accelerated program, a part-time
evening program or attending community college courses
plus a university. Plus, there are associate degrees,
certificates and conferences that offer continuing education
training and credits.
So,
how do you choose what's the best technical education
for you? Virginia has an excellent community college
system throughout the state, and it can be the quickest,
most cost-effective route. As key players in local work
force development programs, community colleges provide
an array of options, from two-year associate degrees
to highly specialized technical training, supplemented
as necessary by courses such as basic reading and writing.
Even a two-year degree can reap significant earnings
gains over a career - as much as $250,000 in lifetime
earnings.
Private
career schools offer another way to get degrees or certificates
in information technology. Career schools are very results
oriented, whereas colleges and universities tend to
be process oriented, contends Mark Dreyfus, president
of ECPI College of Technology. People generally choose
career schools for their convenience of the program,
the unique type of program offered, or the service they
get from them. ECPI offers two-year AAS degrees in computer
and information science and computer and electronic
technology, as well as various certifications in IT.
Entry-level salaries for the AAS degree graduates currently
can top $38,000.
Work
force development is a recent priority for Radford University.
About two years ago the university opened the Business
Assistance Center (BAC) as part of its Outreach Economic
Development Program. The BAC provides a variety of certification
and training programs, including the highly sought-after
Microsoft Systems Engineer certificate program. "We
work with people in the area who have some IT experience,
but do not have certification. It's a career enhancement
tool," says Dr. Jerry Kopf, executive director
of the Business Assistance Center.
A
quicker way to obtain training or certification is to
attend a technology or technical conference. The Virginia
Military Institute (VMI) has been putting on three major
conferences each year as well as a four-day continuing
education program for civil engineers and surveyors,
according to Justin Speers of VMI's conference office.
The Environment Virginia Symposium, the Commonwealth
of Virginia Information Technology Symposium (COVITS)
and the Virginia Transportation Conference draw between
650 and 850 people each. To help surveyors, landscape
architects and engineers understand new technology,
VMI holds the Robert A. Marr School each year during
spring break, drawing anywhere from 20 to 50 participants.
At
its Ashburn campus in Northern Virginia, George Washington
University provides a master of science and information
technology programs in an executive program format.
Classes meet on Friday one week and then on Saturday
the next, making it convenient for managers and those
who run their own businesses. The program is an intense,
15-month process for a diverse group of up to 21 students
Old Dominion University (ODU) offers a variety of ways
to further education on a part-time basis. Of course,
you can attend the main campus in Norfolk, or any of
its satellite campuses. You can also take advantage
of ODU's Teletechnet distance-learning program or its
new CD-ROM training. ODU offers distance-learning programs
in a variety of formats - by satellite, videostreaming
format, CD ROM, video conferencing-to people everywhere,
according to ODU's Anne Savage. "You can go to
a site, stay at home or be at work," she says.
The new CD-ROM venue, which is just now becoming available
for non-military folks, was originally created for Navy
submarine officers who were unable to receive satellite
signals.
For
those wishing to go back to school full-time, there
are plenty of options. One of the newest is Radford
University's College of Information Science and Technology.
The school helps students learn to analyze problems
from a theoretical and a real-world perspective and
apply their understanding to information technology.
The
cost of getting a technical education can be forbidding,
but the rate of return is probably higher than most
other places you can invest your time and money. The
$28,000 tab for a George Washington University executive
program, for instance, is downright scary. But if you
learn skills that you can apply immediately at work,
and if you can parlay those skills into a $10,000-a-year
raise, that represents a 36 percent return on investment.
If anything, demand will grow even more.
Return to Virginia Business - June 2002
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