100 Percent Employment: SCC Apprenticeship Programs Helping to Close the Gap Programs
February 26, 2019
According to
some estimates, California will face a shortage of nearly 1.5 million skilled
workers by 2025. While the California Community Colleges are working hard to
address what experts call the “middle-skills job gap,” questions remain about
the most effective ways to help students get the skills they need to secure
these often high-paying jobs and fulfill regional workforce needs.
Santiago Canyon
College has one possible answer: apprenticeships.
As the largest
apprenticeship program within the Orange County Community Colleges system and
the third largest in California, SCC’s apprenticeship program offers many
unique and compelling benefits for students who want to immediately enter the
workforce while also seeking a higher level of education and certification.
“Apprenticeships
are an outstanding opportunity,” says Von Lawson, Dean of Business and Career Education
at Santiago Canyon College. “These programs educate you for free so you have no
debt, and then they employ you. 100 percent of graduates have a job. That’s how
apprenticeships work. What other programs can say that?”
The result of
key partnerships between regional trade unions (or “training trusts”), local
businesses, and the college itself, apprenticeships in many ways encapsulate
the “win-win” mission of career education: to meet regional and national
workforce needs by providing skilled graduates direct pathways to high-paying
jobs.
Apprentices not
only get paid while they train, they earn raises for each completed training
level, they earn college credit for the classroom instruction they receive, and
apprenticeship classes are exempt from regular college tuition and enrollment
fees.
Despite these
advantages, resistance to career education remains. “You have a group of people
out there who are always going to say, ‘That’s old vocational ed. That’s for
people that don’t want a college education,’” says Lawson, who himself followed
a traditional four-year degree path but now considers himself a “100% career ed
convert.”
“The reality is
you can go into any of our career ed or apprenticeship programs and then go as
far as you want to,” he continues. “But here’s the difference: when you go through
our program first, you leave with a skill related to an actual job that can
make you real money. Many of our students are able to pay for themselves to get
through school because they leave our programs with outstanding, high-paying
career opportunities already.”
This year,
SCC’s career education programs earned an impressive 11 Strong Workforce Stars
from the California Community Colleges Chancellor’s Office’s Strong Workforce
Program, which honors programs that exhibit exceptionally strong student
outcomes in the areas of earnings gains, living wage achievement, and
degree-related job attainment.
What’s more
impressive is that five of those Stars went to apprenticeship programs.
“These stars
are a testament to our amazing Business and Career Education staff and all
of our partners at the training trusts,” says Lawson. “Across the board,
they’re all so immensely dedicated. They do the hard work because they want
these programs to grow and they want to see graduates do well. They really do
care.”
In conjunction
with regional training trusts and the State of California’s Division of
Apprenticeship Standards, the apprenticeship program at Santiago Canyon College
offers apprenticeships in the following areas:
- Carpentry:
Acoustical Tile, Drywall/Lather, Drywall Finisher, Plastering
- Carpentry:
Concrete, Finish Carpentry, Framing, Tilt-Up
- Carpentry:
Millwright
- Carpentry:
Pile Driver
- Cosmetology
- Electrician:
Inside Wireman, Sound Installer
- Maintenance
Mechanic and Electrician
- Operating
Engineers: Heavy Equipment Operator, Heavy Duty Repair, Inspection, Rock
Products Industry
- Power
Lineman
- Surveying:
Chainman, Chief of Party
In all cases,
successful completion (which includes the passing of licensure exams) leads to
journeyworker status in the State of California, meets requirements for a
Certificate of Achievement through Santiago Canyon College, and satisfies major
requirements for an associate degree. This means that apprentices looking to
finish their AA have only their general education requirements to complete.
For example, SCC’s
Power Lineman program, which earned a Gold Star, takes approximately three and
a half years to complete and mixes classroom/field instruction with 7,000 hours
of paid, on-the-job training to prepare students for the highly skilled work of
erecting and maintaining power lines.
Similarly, the Silver-Star-winning
Carpentry: Drywall/Lather, Electricity: Industrial, Surveying: Chief of Party
programs, and the Bronze-Star-winning Maintenance Mechanic I program all
provide similar in-depth, on-the-job training in their respective fields that
not only allows students to secure a debt-free education, but leads directly to
employment.
As the middle-skills job gap continues to grow, SCC remains committed to providing the kind of workforce education that graduates and Orange County businesses need to not just keep the lights on, but to shine. For more information about SCC’s many career education and apprenticeship programs, please visit the Division of Business and Career Education at https://www.sccollege.edu/Departments/CareerEd/Pages/default.aspx