Category Archives: West Texas

TSTC Students Prepare for Pop-Up Restaurant Opening

Texas State Technical College Culinary Arts students will open their temporary restaurant beginning Tuesday, Nov. 3 at T&P Depot on North 1st Street in Abilene.

(ABILENE) – Dusty Barnett, a first-year culinary arts student at Texas State Technical College in Abilene, is eager to be in the middle of the quick pace of a restaurant atmosphere for the first time later this fall.

“I love to cook, so I decided to get that degree in something I enjoy doing,” said Barnett, 34, of Abilene and a Class of 2000 graduate of Paint Creek High School in Paint Creek. “I enjoy the cooking and how the food tastes to other people and knowing that I had a part in creating that food.”

Barnett and other TSTC culinary arts students are preparing for the opening of a temporary student-run restaurant at T&P Depot at 901 N. 1st St. in Abilene.

People interested in visiting can make a reservation beginning Thursday, Oct. 1. by calling 325-670-9240 or online at tstc.edu/about/culinarydiningabilene. The restaurant will be open from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesdays to Thursdays on Nov. 3-5, 10-12, 17-19 and Dec. 1-3 and 8-9.
Students have several options to study culinary arts at TSTC’s campuses.

Students in West Texas can pursue an associate degree in Professional Cooking or a certificate in Food Service Technology in Abilene.

TSTC also offers culinary arts at the Waco, Harlingen and Williamson County campuses.

TexasBank of Brownwood President to Present Five TSTC Scholarships

(BROWNWOOD) – Gregory Dodds, President and CEO of TexasBank of Brownwood, presented five TSTC students with $1,000 scholarships on Monday, Sept. 21.

The bank has donated $5,000 annually to TSTC for several years. This year the bank asked that the money be disbursed at the rate of $1,000 each to five worthy Brownwood students.

The five students selected, Joshua Barron, Irene Holmes, Dawn Pinkard, Mariolis Ragland and Laura Weaver, were selected based on merit and financial need.

Joshua Barron, a fifth semester Software & Business Accounting student, said he has plans for the scholarship.

“It will help with books, tuition, gas back and forth to campus, and program materials,” Barron said.

TSTC in West Texas Provost Eliska Smith said these kinds of gifts are something that really helps the students.

“Scholarships like these not only help the students with tuition, but also with unexpected expenses that they may need help covering to stay in school,” Smith said. “We’re thankful to Mr. Dodds and TexasBank of Brownwood for supporting TSTC and our students.”

Dodds serves as a Board Member for The TSTC Foundation.

TSTC Veterans Students Receive $75,000 Gift from EMA Electromechanics

Texas State Technical College and EMA Electromechanics officials pose for a photo with EMA’s $75,000 gift to TSTC Veteran Students.

(SWEETWATER) – TSTC celebrated a gift of $75,000 from EMA Electromechanics.

EMA was founded in 1952 in Buenos Aires, Argentina, but expanded to open its Sweetwater location in 2010 where they develop and manufacture specialized electromechanical equipment for wind and solar generation.

The gift, part of a celebration for EMA’s five-year anniversary, founds an account called Sweetwater Veteran’s Funds for College Education. Funds will go towards helping veterans complete their technical training at the college’s West Texas campuses in Abilene, Breckenridge, Brownwood and Sweetwater.

Veteran students completing an associate degree can apply to receive up to $2,500, and those completing a certificate can receive up to $1,250. These funds will help veteran students with tuition and books, program supplies and living, child care and transportation expenses.

“We wanted to reach veterans because we owe them the freedom we have today,” said EMA Chief Financial Officer Gabriel Acosta. “We wouldn’t be able to be doing business as freely as we are without them.”

Acosta hopes the gift will help ease the transition veterans face when returning from service.

“We hope we can help them get back into civilian life, get an education and help them in the process,” Acosta said.

TSTC in West Texas Provost Eliska Smith said the gift demonstrates gratitude.

“This past summer, TSTC served 76 veterans in our West Texas locations,” said Smith. “This gift will help bring even more veterans to TSTC for the technical education they need to be successful in the workplace. It not only helps TSTC serve our veterans better, but it shows them that the community as a whole appreciates their service.”

EMA has also pledged to match donations made to the fund, up to $37,500, through Dec. 31, 2016.

If you would like to make a donation to the Sweetwater Veteran’s Funds for College Education, please contact The TSTC Foundation at 325-660-8721.

TSTC to Hold Second Annual Reach for Recovery Car & Bike Show Saturday

(ABILENE) – Texas State Technical College will hold its second annual Reach for Recovery Car & Bike Show from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 19 at the campus in Abilene.

There will be a $20 fee per vehicle per class to enter the show. Classes include antique, classic, muscle, import, pick up, orphan, unfinished, Volkswagen, Corvette, rat rod, low rider and motorcycle.

Several TSTC programs will be participating, including Emergency Medical Services performing wellness checks, Digital Arts drawing caricatures, and Welding creating the trophies for car show winners. Digital Media Design also designed fliers for the event, Drafting mapped out the event area, Software & Business Management organized the vendors and the Chemical Dependency Counseling program is hosting.

A variety of booths will be present, and the animal shelter will have a food drive and adoption event. There will also be vendors selling food and crafts.

Sponsors include:

GOLD: Abilene Chicken Expresses (owned by TSTC Alumnus Steve Davis), Classic Auto Restyling
SILVER: Arrow Ford, Abilene Behavioral Health, A Party People, 3rd Street Printing and Sign Co.
BRONZE: The 180 House, Mary Kay

Admission is free. Funds raised will benefit Guardians of the Children, and TSTC’s Reach Club and Student Leadership. For more information, visit www.facebook.com/wheelsforrecovery.

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TSTC to Hold Second Annual Reach for Recovery Car & Bike Show

(ABILENE) – Texas State Technical College will hold its second annual “Reach for Recovery” Car & Bike Show from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 19 at the campus in Abilene. There will be a $20 fee per vehicle per class to enter the show. Classes include antique, import, rat rod, motorcycle and more. Admission is free. Funds raised will benefit Guardians of the Children, and TSTC’s Reach Club and Student Leadership. For more information, visit facebook.com/wheelsforrecovery.

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TSTC Chancellor Announces New Leadership for West Texas

(SWEETWATER) – Chancellor Mike Reeser announces the appointment of Eliska Smith, MASCL to serve as provost for the Texas State Technical College campuses in Abilene, Breckenridge, Brownwood and Sweetwater, effective August 10.

 Smith began her career in marketing and communications more than 25 years ago, spanning the economic development and consulting, publishing and health care industries, as well as higher education. Smith’s tenure with TSTC began in 2002. Today, she serves as TSTC’s statewide public relations officer and leads strategic communications from the central administrative offices in Waco. Previously, she was TSTC’s associate vice chancellor specializing in communications, public relations, and leadership development. She also was the founding director and sponsoring executive-in-charge of the TSTC Leadership Institute.

“In essence, the job of the provost is to make TSTC a great place to work and to develop our relationships with the communities in which we operate,” said Chancellor Michael L. Reeser. “I have confidence that Eliska’s keen grasp of the organizational mission and her ability to foster relationships will be an asset to our West Texas family,” added Reeser.

“Eliska’s leadership experience and broad background will serve her well as the provost and leader of our West Texas campuses,” said Gail Lawrence, President Emerita, Vice Chancellor & Chief Culture Officer.

“It will be my joy to call the Big Country home,” said Smith. “I look forwarding to helping TSTC strengthen our partnerships with community and industry leaders to strengthen our economies and to help more Texans prosper,” added Smith.

Smith received a Master of Arts in Strategic Communications and Leadership from Seton Hall University, an advanced certificate in mid-management from SMU/Cox School of Business, and a Bachelor of Arts from Baylor University.

Smith has served in leadership positions within community and professional associations including: President and past president of the board, Christian Women’s Job Corp of McLennan County; lay director of the Greater Waco Emmaus Community; member, Waco LeadershipPlenty; secretary, board member, and president of the Central Texas Chapter Public Relations Society of America; district IV executive committee member for the National Council for Marketing and Public Relations, member of the Leadership Waco Class XX, board member of the Leadership Waco Alumni Association, member of the Rotary Club of Waco, and board member of the Waco Aviation Advisory Board.

Smith is a single mother, with a son, Houston, who is attending Texas Tech University, and a daughter, Caroline, who will be attending Sweetwater High School.

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TSTC Hires New Director of Instructional Support Services

(BROWNWOOD) — Texas State Technical College in Brownwood welcomed a new Director of Instructional Support Services June 1. Dr. Les Plagens took over the role after leaving Howard Payne University, where he worked for 23 years, serving the past 18 years as dean and professor for the School of Business.

Plagens provided leadership in attaining specialized accreditation with the International Assembly for Collegiate Business Education and in developing the MBA programs in Brownwood, El Paso and New Braunfels.

Previously, he served as principal of Brownwood State School from 1991 to 1997 and taught distributive education in the Kerrville ISD and Shallowater ISD career and technology programs from 1977 to 1982.

Plagens earned a Bachelor of Science (1977) and Master of Arts in Teaching (1979) from Angelo State University, and a Doctorate of Education (1986) from Texas A&M University, with a major in post-secondary vocational education administration.

Dr. Plagens and his wife, Camille, have been married 38 years and have three children and two grandchildren.

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TSTC to Hold Annual Blossom Day Camp

jessica coxJessica Cox, the first person to fly a plane with only her feet, will speak at the event.

(SWEETWATER) – TSTC will hold their annual Blossom event at the Sweetwater and Abilene campuses on May 19, and the Breckenridge and Brownwood campuses May 20. The camp will take place from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

TSTC’s Blossom event aims to teach young women about STEM programs, and raise awareness of the different fields available to them. Registration will begin at 8 a.m. The day will include team building exercises, a guest speaker and tours of the different programs TSTC offers.

Pilot Jessica Cox will speak at the event. Cox, born without arms, is the first person in aviation history to fly a plane with only her feet. Cox holds the Guinness World Record for being the first armless person to earn a pilot’s certificate. Not only can she fly a plane, but she is also a black belt in Tae Kwon Do, she can surf, scuba dive, play the piano and live a normal life using her feet as others use their hands.

A tentative schedule for all four campuses can be seen here.

Blossom at the Abilene and Sweetwater campuses are full, but interested teachers and students (ages 13 and up) can register for the event at the Breckenridge and Brownwood campuses at https://docs.google.com/a/tstc.edu/forms/d/1mhehDeLZL3U0lypBDalBziW-fRps4hMrMjAKCVk9nO4/viewform.

 

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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.