The Washington-Saratoga-Warren-Hamilton-Essex Board of Cooperative Educational Services (WSWHE BOCES) announced a new name and direction for its Career and Technical Education (CTE) machine tool technology program.
The new title—Industrial and Performance Machining—reflects the industry today and better positions the program to prospective students, officials said.
Officials said the program places a heavy emphasis on high-tech equipment and precision in the machining of component parts for automobiles, performance vehicles, industrial machines, and more. This consists of fabricating component parts to specification for these applications using milling, drilling, grinding, and boring machines.
While “Machine Tool Technology” is often used by technical colleges, WSWHE BOCES administration and educators said that students did not immediately identify the program in line with career goals.
In an effort to continuously offer programs and curricula that best support our students and the current job market, the transition from Machine Tool Technology to Industrial and Performance Machining reflects a growing need to reach high school students interested in machining careers.
“Our metal fabrication facility would be unable to operate without individuals trained to program and run the wide variety of machines we have on our shop floor. These students are essential to our current success and our future survival,” Aindrea E. Lundberg, of the Fort Miller Group Inc. in Greewich.
In addition to strong ties with industry partners, the program directly addresses two common areas of machining: large-scale, industrial machine shops and smaller, more varied performance engines and vehicles.
It is the hope of WSWHE BOCES that the new name will help prospective students better understand the program and how machining impacts their daily lives.
The program “enables students to learn not only how to fabricate components but experience where the components fit into the real-world environment,” said James Alheim, a representative of Stone Bridge Iron & Steel Inc. in Gansevoort.
CTE programs are geared toward students who benefit from “doing” while learning, allowing them to achieve their high school diploma while also acquiring the technical skills needed for certain career goals. With more than 20 programs, CTE prepares students for interesting, in-demand careers, whether they graduate into the workforce or continue their education, according to BOCES.