Category Archives: Waco

TSTC, Rosenberg Police Department to Host Coffee with a Cop

(FORT BEND) – Grab a free cup of Joe at Coffee with a Cop hosted by Texas State Technical College and the Rosenberg Police Department on May 24.

The event will be hosted for the first time at TSTC’s Industrial Technology Center from 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. and is opened to the community.

Rosenberg’s police are the responding department for the campus and have already participated in events such as new student orientations, spring break awareness and summer safety events.

Director of Student Services Georgeann Calzada said her goal for the event is to provide the TSTC and local community with the opportunity to interact with Rosenberg’s police.

“The event is a great opportunity to build the bridge between the local police deparCoffee with a Coptment and the community,” she said. “This will help our students build trust in their local police. I want our students, faculty and staff that stay after normal business hours to feel at ease calling the police officers for help if they need it.”

The Rosenberg Police Department will also be on hand to discuss any issues or concerns that affect Rosenberg and the surrounding communities.

Rosenberg Police Department Community Relations Officer Michael Bradley said he is looking forward to meeting those he serves.

“I want to encourage our community to come out and network with us in a relaxed atmosphere,” Bradley said. “This event is for them and it’s been great organizing this with TSTC and we hope we have many more events like this with them in the future.”

Calzada said it has been a pleasure working closely with the Rosenberg Police Department.

“I feel the partnership between Rosenberg’s police department and TSTC has grown tremendously in the last 10 months since TSTC’s new campus was built,” she said. “I know that between our two organizations, we’re making Rosenberg a better place to live and work.”

Also joining the effort is McDonald’s by providing the coffee and juice for community participants.

“McDonald’s has been so generous in their donations,” Calzada said.

Calzada added that Coffee with a Cop is also a great opportunity to highlight TSTC’s campus.

“I’m so excited to bring this event to the TSTC campus and welcoming our community members,” Calzada said. “I’m looking forward to hearing feedback from our community on how we (TSTC) can better serve their needs when it comes to education and workforce demand.”

For more information about attending Coffee with a Cop call 346-239-3422.

TSTC and Mars Chocolate North America Celebrate TWC Skills Development Grant

(WACO) – Leaders from Texas State Technical College, the Texas Workforce Commission and Mars Chocolate North America gathered Tuesday to commemorate a $92,203 Skills Development Fund grant aimed at improving workers’ skills at the candy manufacturer’s Waco factory.

“What Texas State Technical College provides to the community is one of the greatest tools with regard to our economic development,” said Seth Morris, vice president for economic development at the Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce.

The grant will create six new jobs and provide technical training to more than 90 workers to better their skills for using fasteners, lubricants, components, valves and hand tools. The first training led by TSTC faculty members was in late April. The grant’s regional impact is expected to be more than $765,000, according to the state workforce commission.

TSTC in Waco Provost Adam Hutchison said the grant symbolized some of the best collaboration that can be done in the city to further develop the workforce.

Gary Mueller, training manager for Mars Chocolate in Waco, said staff were appreciative of the opportunity to grow the company in manpower and knowledge.

The grant builds on the progress that Waco and the state have made in economic development.

TWC Commissioner Representing Employers Ruth R. Hughs said Waco currently has a 4.3 percent unemployment rate, while the state unemployment rate is 5 percent. Waco’s unemployment rate is on par with the Abilene, Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington and San Antonio-New Braunfels metropolitan areas and is less than unemployment in the Beaumont-Port Arthur, Brownsville-Harlingen, Corpus Christi and McAllen-Mission-Edinburg metropolitan areas.

Hughs said CEO Magazine has named Texas the best state to do business in for the 13th consecutive year.

“The Skills Development Fund is the premier job training program with custom training and promoting employees in getting marketable skills,” Hughs said.

Mars Chocolate North America on Texas Central Parkway in Waco has more than 550 employees making the popular candies Skittles, Starburst and variations of Snickers.

For more information on Texas State Technical College, go to tstc.edu.

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TSTC Automotive Technology Program Receives Equipment Donations

(WACO) – Texas State Technical College’s Automotive Technology program recently received several donations from Fiat Chrysler Automobiles – North America.

The donations include 2014 models of the Chrysler 200 S, Jeep Cherokee Latitude and Dodge Ram 3500 Turbo Diesel truck as well as eight engines.

The vehicles and engines will be used by TSTC students in the nationwide Mopar Career Automotive Program (MCAP). The program is a blended internship and technical education program training college students to be factory-certified to work at Fiat Chrysler Automobiles dealerships nationwide. TSTC’s MCAP program  has 14 students, with another 20 students beginning classes this fall.

The vehicles, which have high-end features such as electric windows and state-of-the-art control panels, are valued at more than $90,000. Students will also learn about the vehicle’s software and new emission systems — the kinds of things the students will eventually encounter as technicians in dealerships.

“Most of these vehicles are write-offs for the manufacturer,” said George Williams, a TSTC Automotive Technology instructor. “It gives our students access to the newest technology.”

The four 1.4 L MultiAir engines are valued at $1,500 each, the three 3.6 L Pentastar engines are valued at $2,000 each and the Cummins 6.7 L diesel engine is valued at $10,000.

“We can show demonstrations on the diesel engine,” said Matthew Mills, a TSTC Automotive Technology instructor. “It gives the students an opportunity to do more hands-on work better than sitting in a classroom.”

Some of the engines will stay in plastic and on pallets until they are rotated in for use in classes. Students are expected to begin using the engines in midsummer.

“The engines can be taken apart and put together just a few times,” Williams said. “The old engines are recycled and get crushed, and we receive new ones.”

TSTC offers an Associate of Applied Science degree in Automotive Technology – Chrysler Specialization.

For more information on Texas State Technical College, go to tstc.edu.

Waco Auto Tech donations May 11, 2017

TSTC Student Tunes in to Music and Technology

(WACO) – Camp Neff is proving to be good with his hands.

Neff, 22, of Franklin, Texas, is a Robotics Technology major at Texas State Technical College. He is also a dual threat playing banjo and table tennis — but not at the same time.

When Neff is not studying direct and alternating currents or the basics of robotics, he is playing banjo with the Fence Post Pickers featuring Charles and John Kirk as accompanying vocalists. The band performs throughout the Brazos Valley.

“We stick to tried, true and classic bluegrass and country,” Neff said, citing the late banjo picker Earl Scruggs as one of his favorite musicians.

Neff received the Gibson Top Tension banjo he currently plays as a birthday gift when he was 16.

“Instruments sound better the older they are,” he said. “The banjo has broken me out of any rut I was in before. I play the banjo and keep people happy.”

Neff was home-schooled and participated in high school robotics competitions.

“You have to do all the work yourself,” he said. “You have to have study time. You can’t do home schooling if you aren’t self-motivated.”

This discipline has helped him in his robotics classes, said Brandon McMahan, a TSTC graduate and Robotics Technology instructor.

“He is a great student,” McMahan said. “He is a leader in the classroom.”

The Robotics Technology program is based in the Robotics and Automation Lab in TSTC’s  Electronics Center. McMahan said class sizes average 10 students who are divided up to work with robots.

“You can go straight into the job market,” McMahan said. “We teach students to be entry-level technicians.”

Neff is scheduled to graduate from TSTC in spring 2018.

“I’d like to travel and go from a distribution center to a factory to fix what does not work,” he said. “I want to see what is out there.”

Neff grew up on a ranch in Robertson County.

“I would stare for a half-hour at sugar ants to see what they were doing,” he said. “Nature is vast and complicated, and I experienced it growing up.”

Neff discovered the banjo when he was 12 while at a concert with his family.

“It sounded so different from the other instruments that I knew it was the one,” he said. “If I’m happy or sad, I can play and emote.”

Colee Littlefield, co-owner of Magnolia-based Texas Bluegrass Music LLC, said she admired Neff’s talent.

“It’s great that he started young,” said Littlefield. “It’s easy to train your fingers when they are nice, nimble and young. You are not concentrating as hard as you get older.”

Littlefield’s company organizes yearly bluegrass festivals in Bellville and Grapeland.

“The banjo player is pretty necessary for bluegrass,” she said. “Not every bluegrass band has a fiddle or a Dobro, but they usually have a banjo, mandolin, guitar and stand-up bass. Those are the four basic instruments.”

Neff also found his way to table tennis when he was 12. He primarily plays the game at TSTC’s Murray Watson Jr. Student Services Center. He recently won the table tennis competition at Techsan Day.

“A friend and I would play casually with a tennis ball when I was growing up,” he said. “I loved it and could be competitive with training. It is something to pass the time to keep from getting bored.”

For more information on Texas State Technical College, go to tstc.edu.

Camp Neff banjo robotics May 10, 2017 (1)

 

Connally Career Tech Students March Through TSTC to Earn Dual Credit Hours

(WACO) – Dylan Lowery’s career plans have taken shape even before he receives a diploma later this month from Connally High School.

Lowery, 18, is a student at Connally Career Tech Early College High School on Cadet Way in Waco. During his sophomore, junior and senior years, he took the quick bus ride to Texas State Technical College to take cyber security classes. He has his last course in the fall at TSTC to finish an associate degree in Cyber Security and wants to start work on an Advanced Technical Certificate in Digital Forensics.

“I would like to stay in Waco and work with cyber security,” Lowery said. “I want to do an internship with TSTC to get experience.”

The Connally Independent School District’s early college technical high school partners with TSTC to provide students with opportunities to earn dual credit hours. Connally Career Tech had more than 100 students this academic year who took courses in Cyber Security, Culinary Arts, Welding, Visual Communication Technology, Precision Machining Technology and other technical programs offered at TSTC.

“The partnership with TSTC is crucial for our district. There are schools that would die to be close to a TSTC campus,” Connally Career Tech Principal Hermann Pereira said. “For us to send our kids to the best expertise in the area is good for the school district. Everything is in line to make this a success.”

Connally Career Tech is the only early college technical high school that TSTC works with in Waco.

“There are a lot of good students that have potential,” said Sheryl Kattner-Allen, a manager in TSTC’s Dual Enrollment Operations. “I see the paperwork that comes through and you can see students who are interested and are willing to do the extra work in the summer that has to be done.”

This year, more than 30 Connally Career Tech graduates will wear special stoles at Connally High School’s May 19 graduation ceremony and a special medal from TSTC for completing a career pathway.

Some of the students graduating said the opportunity to take college-level courses changed their minds about their futures.

Randall Stranacher, 18, said taking college classes in welding, cyber security and automotive collision technology made him realize that an education after high school is important to his future. Stranacher’s father, Ryan Stranacher, is an instructor and graduate of TSTC.

“Being at Connally Career Tech has given me time to decide what I want to do,” Randall Stranacher said. “I want to fix and paint vehicles. Ever since I was little, my family was big on cars.”

The younger Stranacher will finish a certificate in Automotive Collision Repair this summer and study auto body refinishing in the fall.

Some students will finish their work at TSTC before moving on to other colleges.

George Zachary Galvan, 18, will finish a Pharmacy Technician certificate after doing clinical work this summer in Waco and attend McLennan Community College in the fall. He finds a career in pharmaceuticals an interesting prospect.

“We are at such an advantage right now,” Galvan said about himself and his classmates. “We can get ahead on getting a job. I knew it would be difficult and tough. I didn’t find the work at TSTC overwhelming, but you had to be prepared and take this seriously.”

Marshall Woodlock, 18, completed a culinary arts certificate at TSTC and is planning to study management in Texas or Massachusetts. He said he was drawn to cooking when he was young preparing meals for his working family.

He credited the early college technical high school in getting him ahead of other students like him.

“College was in the plans, but it wasn’t financially available,” Woodlock said.

Elizabeth Gostomski, a counselor at Connally Career Tech, designs students’ school days around the TSTC course schedule.

“I have contact with someone from TSTC at least once a day,” she said.

Connally Career Tech, which opened three years ago, is projected to rise to 130 students next year. A sixth teacher will join the staff this fall. The students will have additional career path choices as McLennan Community College is added as a partner offering health science and public safety course options.

Pereira said there are plans in the next academic year to create industry advisory committees for each of its career clusters. These committees can offer input on what is expected of students, who potentially can be future employees and what work skills are needed.

“They want to keep that talent pool in Waco,” Pereira said.

For more information on the Connally Independent School District, go to connally.org.

For more information on Texas State Technical College, go to tstc.edu.

Connally Career Tech photo 1 May 3 2017

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TSTC Holds Spring Commencement in Waco

(WACO) – More than 550 graduates received certificates and associate degrees at Texas State Technical College’s Spring 2017 Commencement held Monday, May 1, at the Waco Convention Center.

Students from TSTC’s campuses in Waco, Williamson County, North Texas and Fort Bend County took part in the ceremony. The Waco campus had 495 graduates, Williamson County had 48 graduates, North Texas had 15 graduates and Fort Bend County had one graduate.

Many of the graduates already have jobs and are ready to work.

Kody Teague, 20, of Rockdale and a graduate of Caldwell High School, received an associate degree in Electrical Power and Controls. He will start work soon as a relay technician at Power Grid Engineering LLC in Dallas.

“It feels pretty good at 20 making good money,” Teague said. “It’s not too bad.”

Teague said attending TSTC gave him the opportunity to meet new friends who share his interests and to learn life lessons.

“I wouldn’t trade it for anything,” he said.

Matthew Warrington, 21, of Corsicana received associate degrees in Diesel Equipment Technology Heavy Truck Specialization and Off-Highway Specialization. He will begin work this month at Waukesha-Pearce Industries in Pflugerville.

“I had fun and made a lot of friends,” Warrington said. “I liked the hands-on classes.”

TSTC had more than 1,200 graduates this spring across the state and has graduated more than 100,000 students in its more than 50-year history.

For more information, log on to tstc.edu.

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TSTC Student Uses Skills Learned in Music to Study Gaming and Programming

(WACO) – Video games go beyond being the hero who uses supernatural powers to save the world — or at least an ant colony.

The guts of video games are the logic, programming and mathematics that make characters, landscapes and animals come to life. Dalton Burts of Athens used all these to pay homage to ants for “Antopia,” his final video game project for graduation from Texas State Technical College in Waco.

“You play an ant and your colony is preparing for a flood,” said Burts, 26. “You have to get food and avoid evil anteaters.”

Burts will receive an associate degree in Graphics Gaming and Simulation Programming Technology at Texas State Technical College’s Spring Commencement on Monday, May 1, in Waco. Since Burts enrolled in 2015 at TSTC, the associate degree has now been made an advanced technical certificate, with majors having the option to earn a companion associate degree in Computer Programming Technology.

“I have done tons of hands-on work,” said Burts. “TSTC pushes you to do the best you can. All my discipline I learned was through band and music.”

Susie Watkins, an associate professor in the Computer Science program at TSTC, admires Burts’ work ethic and skills.

“Dalton is always in here working,” Watkins said. “He figures out a lot of stuff on his own. He works well in a team environment.”

Burts learned about TSTC from his father, who studied aircraft pilot training technology.

“I decided to further my education and come here because my father didn’t have a problem getting a job,” he said.

Burts was born in Galveston and moved to Athens in Henderson County when he was 5. Some of his earliest video-game-playing experience was Super Mario Brothers when he was 12.

“I liked how the games didn’t specifically tell you what to do, but I had to figure it out and use my brain,” he said.

As Burts played video games, his appreciation for music grew.

Since he was 12, he has learned to play clarinet, alto saxophone and tenor saxophone and has dabbled with guitar and piano. While growing up he played in jazz and Dixieland bands, along with marching and symphonic bands.

Burts graduated in 2009 from Athens High School and received an associate degree in Musical Performance in 2013 from Trinity Valley Community College in Athens. He said it was challenging finding a music job in the Athens area that did not involve tutoring or teaching.

“I’ve always had a love for gaming and wanted to compose for gaming,” he said. “I have always embraced imagination and never saw a need to let that go.”

Burts wants to work in the Austin area.

Candidates for graduation from TSTC’s Fort Bend County, North Texas, Waco and Williamson County campuses will gather for Spring Commencement at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, May 1, at the Waco Convention Center at 100 Washington Ave. in Waco.

For more information on Texas State Technical College, go to tstc.edu.

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Island Native Finds Career Success in Texas

By Lynda Lopez

Denzel Gore 01Denzel Gore is a long way from home. The 24-year-old now lives in Dallas but is originally from St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, a tiny little island paradise in the Caribbean Sea.

In 2010 he was one of 20 St. Croix students who got scholarships to Texas State Technical College as part of an industry partnership.

“I was pretty excited. It’s not often people get full scholarships to college,” explained Gore. “It was a little overwhelming coming to Waco. I came from a small island. My first impression was that everything was huge here.”

Gore says he was also surprised at how friendly people were on the college campus and in the community.

“Complete strangers said hi. Faculty and staff were so welcoming to us. They made us feel right at home,” said Gore.

Gore earned an associate degree in Instrumentation Controls and Robotics. He credits faculty for his academic success.

“Instructors were always there to help. They were there if you didn’t have transportation or if you were running behind in class,” said Gore. “TSTC faculty make sure you succeed. You get their full support, including one-on-one training and tutoring.”

And Gore says it was the faculty that helped him get a job with Koch Pipeline, which operates pipelines that transport crude oil and petroleum products. He worked in Corpus Christi right after graduation and recently transferred to Dallas.

In a few weeks he’ll be celebrating five years with Koch Pipeline.

“I still have connections with TSTC. Faculty will call and check up on me. They come to Dallas and call so we can do lunch. Maybe it’s a Texas thing. I just love it,” said Gore.

Last month he traveled back to Waco to recruit TSTC students for his company. He says he was honored to represent Koch Pipeline and delighted to see so many old friends.

“I’m glad Koch sent me back,” said Gore. “All these kids would come up to me. I can’t believe that just a few years ago I was in their shoes looking for my first job. Some of them were taking classes I had taken. We could really relate.”

Gore travels back to St. Croix once a year, but he says Texas is now home.  He says he has no regrets about moving to the Lone Star State. He wishes more students knew about TSTC.

“I would encourage students to do their research. Learn more about TSTC. You won’t just get an education and a career,” explained Gore. “You will get a family.”

For more information on TSTC programs and locations, visit us online at tstc.edu.

TSTC Alum Is Living Testimony for Technical Degrees

By Lynda Lopez

Elliott Bermudez 01He was not your typical student at Texas State Technical College. By the time Elliot Bermudez enrolled at TSTC in Waco a decade ago to get an associate degree, he had already earned two bachelor’s degrees from four-year universities.

The problem was he couldn’t get a job.

“I have a business degree in accounting, economics and business principles. I also have an electrical engineering degree from a university, but no one would hire me because I didn’t have experience,” explained Bermudez. “I was doing maintenance in apartments earning $25,000 a year just to get by.”

Bermudez’s wife knew he had more potential and pushed him to attend TSTC.

“I did a lot of research. I saw the number of students that got hired onto different jobs prior to graduating or right after graduation. I did my research and saw how much people were making,” he said.

Bermudez entered TSTC’s Industrial Engineering program and excelled. He was one of only two graduates in 2008 who could boast of a perfect 4.0 grade-point average. He credits his instructors and hands-on training for his academic success.

“Even though I had an electrical engineering degree, I had never had so much hands-on training as I had here. My experience was awesome,” said Bermudez.

That TSTC training paid off big for this Waco native. He completed an internship with Shell, was assigned a mentor, and was taught the oil business “from cradle to grave,” as they say in the business.

At the end of the internship he was interviewed by a panel of Shell administrators and tested for his knowledge. By the end of the session he was offered a job – and hired a week before graduation.

Today Bermudez works for Shell Offshore making a six-figure salary as a Senior Authorized Electrical Person.

“We have contractors from different companies that come and work. We prepare permits for them, work permits. But prior to that, we have to walk the job down, see all the hazards and put mitigations; we go out there with them and make sure that their job is safe,” he explained.

Bermudez speaks from experience when he urges future students to research two-year versus four-year degrees. As he points out, a bachelor’s degree isn’t for everyone.

“You can spend the amount of money you’re going to spend at TSTC for two years, or go to a four-year university and spend that same amount in one or two semesters. Make your choice wisely,” said Bermudez.

Valley Mills Woman Finds Success in a Man’s World

By Lynda Lopez

TKatelyn Bateman 01exas State Technical College alum Katelyn Bateman has a waspy, fresh-faced, sorority girl look – blonde, pretty and petite.

But she’s proven she’s much more than good looks, making her way in a man’s world and doing a good job of it.

The Valley Mills native is a utility designer for Oncor Electric Delivery, an electric power company in Round Rock, and a 2015 graduate of the Electrical Power and Controls program on the Waco TSTC campus.

“My education at TSTC was superb. I still use theory every day that I learned in my first semesters, and sometimes I find myself explaining electrical concepts to my co-workers,” said Bateman.

Today in her job, Bateman works with new construction in the Pflugerville, Hutto and north Austin areas, engineering the design that will bring electricity to new homes and buildings.

“This career is great in many ways,” explained Bateman. “It’s challenging, hands-on, a perfect mixture of field time and office time. Plus, the money is good.”

Bateman says that as a child she liked to take things apart and put them back together. When it was time for college, Bateman considered teaching or nursing but in the end was drawn to a career with a hands-on aspect.

As a student at TSTC, Bateman was one of only a handful of ladies in a male-dominated program. She says it took a while for her male classmates to warm up to her.

“I had to prove myself with the other students because I was female,” said Bateman. “I would hear the guys say things like, ‘Go ask the girl,’ like I didn’t have a name.”

Bateman eventually won the “guys” over with her work ethic, leadership skills and knowledge. In 2014 she was awarded the “Women in Trades” scholarship – one of only two Texans to win the award.

Today Bateman hopes to inspire more women to look beyond traditional careers and take up the challenge of entering male-dominated technology industries.

“My advice to women is don’t let the stereotypes of women or typical jobs influence you. I get compliments daily on my courage and capability to jump into this male-dominated field,” said Bateman. “I’m proud to work in utility design.”

Bateman is now working on her bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering, recently enrolling in Tarleton State University’s online program. She hopes to complete her bachelor’s in two to three years.

“By the time I have a bachelor’s degree, I will also have four to five years of experience under my belt. This will increase my options of advancing within my company.”

TSTC has 10 locations across Texas. For more information on TSTC programs near you, visit us online at tstc.edu.