Six-figure salaries the norm with a two-year welding degree

Students Welding

Students Welding

An article in the January 7 edition of the Wall Street Journal profiles a TSTC student who turned his two-year welding degree into a $140,000-a-year job working for an energy company in Houston. According to Welding Technology Department Chair Kenny Moore, this is more the norm than the exception these days.

“I think we’re in such good shape because of how the energy sector’s doing right now—it’s booming,” said Moore. “That’s where the majority of our students are being hired; in refineries, chemical plants, offshore oil and natural gas. And for those jobs, Texas is probably the best place to be in the nation.”

And the salaries are eye-popping. Take Guillermo Perez, for example. A May 2014 graduate, Perez was hired by Bechtel Construction before receiving an associate degree. He’s part of the team working with Cheniere Energy to build liquefied natural gas trains and facilities near Corpus Christi.

“I couldn’t be happier,” said Perez. “I had prior experience in the construction trade, but nothing major. Nobody ever gave me the chance that Bechtel did. Now I make $31.50 an hour plus a daily per diem. I work 56-64 hours a week and have my weekends free to spend with my wife and three kids. I don’t need to work more than that to have a great life. We just moved into a new house and bought a brand-new truck. Life is good.”

According to Moore, the key to TSTC’s success in helping graduates find these high-paying jobs is aligning with industry giants and keeping up with the latest technology.

“We’re constantly building the technical side of our curriculum,” Moore explained. “We work hand-in-hand with companies like Bechtel and CRC Evans to make sure what we’re teaching is absolutely cutting-edge and is what industry is looking for when they hire our students. It’s a win for them, too, because they get to hire people that are work-ready from day one. To help us do that, they serve on our advisory boards and donate equipment and funds.”

Evans recently donated $60,000 in brand-new equipment and sent a trainer down to teach faculty and students and to use it, free of charge. And Bechtel, who has hired more TSTC students than any other company, has an office on campus where they offer testing to students about to graduate. These kinds of hands-on relationships are crucial to keeping the Texas economy strong.

“We’re getting a lot of students interested in the program,” said Moore. “They’re enthusiastic and they understand it’s a great market for them right now. We’re continually aligning ourselves with as many companies as we can to give our students the best opportunities to get great paying jobs when they graduate.”

Perez’s advice for anyone considering a welding career: “Definitely keep going beyond the certificate to the associate degree—it really pays off. Before I got mine, I could make maybe $20 an hour, tops. But with the associate you can make more than $30.”

For more information on the TSTC Welding Program, go online at www.tstc.edu/harlingenwelding/

Schoenmakers gets through school debt-free

Valerie Schoenmakers

Valerie Schoenmakers

Valerie Schoenmakers, a TSTC nursing student who will receive her Associate of Applied Sciences degree in Registered Nursing this August, has found the right prescription for achieving her college degree: a mix of hard work, good grades and perseverance. This formula will allow her to graduate with in-demand skills and no college debt.

“I have no debt,” says Schoenmakers proudly. “I chose TSTC because it was near my house and it had the classes and degree program I wanted. Living at home, not only do I save money, but I have a more financially responsible lifestyle than I might if I were living with other students my age. It just makes sense.”

The secret to Schoenmakers’ success, besides her thrifty nature, is scholarships. TSTC has a variety of scholarships available to help students with tuition, books and more. The college hosts several scholarship workshops annually. Schoenmakers has been the recipient of two scholarships, for a total award of $3,400 in scholarship funds.

Most recently, she was one of three students awarded the Lozano Long Promise Opportunity Scholarship, for which she received $2,000. As a Lozano Long scholar, she was invited to speak at the Noche De Gala last month. She told the audience, which included current and potential donors, that she was deeply grateful for all the help she’s received.

Especially since she has seen the result of different choices.

“Several of my friends are working on degrees from other schools and they’ve already got $30,000 or more in debt,” said Schoenmakers. “I want to avoid that and start my career debt free. I used to encourage other students to apply for scholarships when I worked in the Student Success office on campus so they could be debt free, too. But I guess not a lot of people want to put the effort into filling out the paperwork and writing an essay.”

Which is all the more reason to do it, she insists. “There’s a lot of financial aid available out there for those willing to put in the effort,” Schoenmakers said. “I tell students to take school seriously and do what you have to do to get it done if you want to succeed. You need training and education to do that.”

For more information on TSTC’s nursing program, visit http://www.tstc.edu/harlingenrn/. For scholarship information, visit http://www.tstc.edu/harlingenfinancialaid/scholarships.

President Wooten Steps Into New Role

A going away reception in President Randy Wooten’s honor was held on October 23, 2014.

Effective Sept. 2, Randy Wooten, President of TSTC Marshall will also serve TSTC as Vice Chancellor of Strategic Initiatives.

Wooten has served as president of TSTC Marshall since his appointment in May 2006. Prior to his appointment, Wooten served as vice president for student learning at TSTC Marshall.

He came to TSTC after serving as the technical services manager for the Brazos River Authority in Waco, and the assistant superintendent and vice president of administrative services for the Long Beach Community College District in Long Beach, CA.

Wooten also served more than 20 years in higher education with assignments ranging from classroom instructor to vice chancellor, with the majority of these assignments in the Air Force while stationed at Air University, Maxwell AFB, AL.

Responsibility for the day-to-day activities at the TSTC Marshall campus will go to Barton Day, who will serve as provost and the college’s executive academic officer. Day, who has a 30 year career history in the Unites States Air Force where he attained the rank Chief Master Sergeant, the top enlisted grade, joined TSTC in April 2012. He has served as the director of strategic initiatives and led the college’s education and training as vice president of student learning since January 2013.

A College System Lets Students’ Pay Determine Its Budget Requests

The idea of judging colleges by how well their graduates do in getting jobs, or what those jobs pay, makes plenty of institutions nervous. Not the Texas State Technical College system.

The 12,000-student system likes the idea so much, in fact, that it now uses a simple formula weighing those factors to determine nearly all of the instructional money it requests from the state.

The “returned value” formula is based on the number of students who land jobs and how much above the minimum wage students earn once they leave college. The system tracks wages for all students who have taken at least nine credits, and calculates the salary differentials based on a five-year average. (Before it makes a final request, it also factors in a discount to ensure the sum it’s seeking isn’t completely out of line with requests from previous budget cycles.)

In effect, it’s as if the college is asking to be paid on commission for its students who land successfully in jobs that pay well.

The approach sits at the intersection of two growing trends in higher education, performance-based funding and the measurement of students’ labor-market outcomes, notes Andrew P. Kelly, director of the Center on Higher Education Reform at the American Enterprise Institute. “At least rhetorically, the system is saying, ‘You’re funding us for success.'”

Officials of the technical-college system began developing the approach about eight years ago, as members of the Texas Legislature began showing more and more interest in accountability funding.

Over the past few weeks, several of the system’s leaders have become more visible in highlighting it at national meetings, mindful of growing public expectations that colleges will play a role in helping students get jobs. At the same time, the system’s chancellor, Michael L. Reeser, is quick to note that he is not arguing that the approach be adopted across the board.

“The niche that we fill in higher education is narrow,” he says, citing the system’s mission to train skilled workers for high-demand jobs. “This wouldn’t be appropriate, necessarily, for others.”

‘Outcome-Based’ Recommendations Funding public colleges based almost entirely on a job-and-salary-centered formula is very unusual.

Still, the Texas system’s approach raises some interesting questions. Will it lead the colleges to discourage some students from enrolling, to avoid being held responsible for their job outcomes? Will the colleges suffer financially if the minimum wage goes up? How does using a returned-value formula rather than an enrollment-driven one alter the programs and courses that the colleges offer?

The system is just beginning to sort out some of the answers to those questions. In part that’s because the formula is still new. More to the point, its impact hasn’t yet been felt because, for now, the formula doesn’t actually determine the budget request. It just informs it.

The system submits its request for each two-year budget cycle to the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, which sends its recommendations to the Legislature.

In fact, the increase the coordinating board is recommending for the technical colleges under the returned-value formula for the next biennium actually isn’t all that different from what the board is recommending for the community colleges and the state colleges, both of which are seeking funding under a traditional enrollment-driven formula. (The board recommended increases of 13.2 percent for the state colleges, 13.4 percent for the technical colleges, and 13.8 percent for the community colleges.) “We look at what we think is a reasonable ask” of the Legislature, says Susan Brown, assistant commissioner of higher education in Texas.

Two years ago, had the coordinating board followed the technical-college system’s formula to the letter without making any adjustments, it would have recommended an appropriation double the size of the one for the previous biennium. Instead, the board recommended about two-thirds of what the formula had suggested.

For the 2015-17 biennium, Ms. Brown says, the commission is recommending an appropriation equivalent to 74 percent of what the formula called for. Although the recommended funding for the technical colleges isn’t all that different from those for the other systems, the rationale is distinct. Ms. Brown says lawmakers see that: “Our recommendation is based on outcomes. Everybody seems to like the theory behind it.”

Curricular Changes “A cynic would say it hasn’t changed anything,” Mr. Kelly says of the reworked approach. But Mr. Reeser says it has. The technical-college system used to plan degree and certificate programs based on whether it had the appropriate faculty members and whether it believed students would sign up. Now those decisions are based on a new calculus: “Will the grads get good jobs that pay well?”

Not surprisingly, with two giant shale-oil formations now being developed in South and West Texas, several of the new programs are designed to train students for jobs in the oil patch, where truck drivers can earn ,000 to ,000 a year and welders make in excess of ,000.

In addition to degrees and certificates in those fields, the college has created a program to train technicians to repair and replace the bits of a drill pipe used in oil wells. For ,000, students who previously would have gone through a full associate-degree program in oil-field technology can now earn a 12-credit certificate to become a “downhole tool technician.” Mr. Reeser says he knows of one former bartender who took the program and traded his ,000 in annual pay for a job that earns ,000.

Under the formula, that pays off for the colleges, too. The system has closed some programs it used to offer, among them a continuing-education course of study for probation officers and probationers, which is now being offered by a community college.

As for the concerns that the colleges might discourage some students from enrolling, Mr. Reeser says the system sees its role as providing technical training “to everybody who comes to us.”

If resources were more limited, he says, the system might someday feel forced to limit access to the most promising students. For now, he says, it balances the potentially conflicting incentives by focusing on counseling. At the same time, Mr. Reeser says, he wants to imbue the incentives of the returned-value plan throughout the system. By next spring, the system plans to award faculty pay with some of the same criteria of that approach in mind.

Gainful-Employment Parallels The formula raises issues that have parallels in the debate over the U.S. Department of Education’s proposed “gainful employment” rule, due out in final form by the end of the month.

The regulation, which applies to career-oriented and technical programs, would indirectly penalize colleges for programs whose graduates can’t earn enough to justify the cost of the programs. The big difference: The federal rule is designed to punish colleges for programs whose cost can’t be justified. The Texas formula relies more on incentives to promote certain kinds of programs and discourage others. The federal rule is regulatory; the Texas policy is, as Mr. Kelly puts it, “more market responsive.”

For example, colleges with programs covered by the gainful-employment rule say the regulation would punish them for economic conditions outside their control just as low wages in parts of Texas could hurt the technical-college system under its returned-value formula. Colleges also say the gainful-employment rule could lead them to favor students who seem more likely to eventually pay off their loans, leaving some students with fewer educational options. (Supporters of the rule say that would prevent the colleges from victimizing students with debts they can’t manage.)

At the same time, in anticipation of the rule, several for-profit colleges have ditched expensive programs or shortened them to make them more affordable, much in the way Mr. Reeser says the Texas system has “appropriately sized” some of its programs.

Tech Jobs are on the Rise, and they are here in Texas

Technology jobs are on the rise. For the first time since U.S. News began publishing their annual job rankings, the No. 1 job overall isn’t from the health care industry — it’s a tech job.

Employment of network administrators in the computer systems design and related services industry is projected to grow 35 percent from 2012 to 2022 according to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. Growth is expected in healthcare as their use of information technology increases.

Luis Cano, a 2009 TSTC graduate, is working for HP in Abilene. He earned an Associate Degree in Computer Networking in two years and graduated with NO DEBT. After graduation, Cano worked in the computer industry, gaining experience and landed with HP earlier this year. “I love my job,” said Cano. It’s an awesome job that allows me to provide for my family.”

Texas employs the second- most network and computer systems administrators in the nation, behind California. The average wage for a Network and Computer Systems Administrator in Texas is nearly $100,000 annually. According to WANTED Analytics, there have been nearly 5,000 jobs posted for Network and Computer Systems Administrators in Texas in the last 120 days.

Computer networks are critical parts of almost every organization. Network and computer systems administrators are responsible for the day-to-day operation of these networks. They organize, install, and support an organization’s computer systems, including local area networks (LANs); wide area networks (WANs), network segments, intranets, and other data communication systems.

TSTC offers Computer Networking systems in Abilene and Brownwood. TSTC is enrolling now for the fall semester. Apply online at westtexas.tstc.edu today or call 325.672.7091 (Abilene) or 325.641.3911 (Brownwood). Low cost, accelerated training and job placement services. It’s our job to get you a job.