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MCC to expand manufacturing programs

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According to Jim Falco, executive dean of Education, Career and Technical Education, funds will be used to prepare TAA-eligible and other workers for high-wage, high-skill advanced manufacturing occupations.

“We will retrain people who are underemployed so they can qualify for more sustainable work, as well as train those who are unemployed so they can update their skills in areas such as mathematics and technology or robotic skills.”

MCC is the only community college in northern Illinois to offer a robotics program; this fall, the college launched its first-ever Associate in Applied Science degree program in robotics.

MCC currently offers robotic classes using desktop-sized robots, and by next spring, the college will purchase larger equipment and offer classes during the day by expanding at the Woodstock Center at 912 Trakk Lane. The college currently rents the center for welding classes and will be able to offer daytime classes in computer numerical control and robotics by expanding equipment into that location.

“Students will be able to continue their training from a desktop robot to an industrial robot,” Falco said. “Future coursework will include working with programmable logic controls and industrial maintenance programs.”

Welding is currently offered only as a non-credit class, but it is one of the training programs that manufacturers have asked for.

The college also will expand its manufacturing Dual Credit high school program into some of the local high schools soon.

“Having this grant allows us to expand our manufacturing program and to build greater capacity in our robotics program,” said Falco. “This will also benefit the local manufacturers because it will help us to help them fill critical shortages in the pipeline for qualified workers. We have heard the manufacturers’ concerns. They simply do not have enough people to fill the jobs they need,” he said, noting that some companies even have robots sitting idle in their facilities because no one is trained to use them.

“It is McHenry County College’s responsibility to help these companies and their workforces remain successful.”

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