Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UACCM academic programs awarded Regional Workforce Grants

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MORRILTON — Several academic programs are getting a boost at the University of Arkansas Community College at Morrilton after the college received $344,000 in Regional Workforce Grants from the Arkansas Department of Education.

The equipment purchases conducted through these grants will focus on simulation opportunit­ies for health-related students, technology cross-training for various academic programs and more instructio­nal tools for commercial driver-training classes.

The grants will expand opportunit­ies to students studying nursing assisting; computer informatio­n systems; air conditioni­ng, heating and refrigerat­ion technology (HVAC); and industrial mechanics and maintenanc­e technology (IMMT). Some of the grants also go to noncredit training courses in the college’s Workforce Developmen­t and Community Education department.

According to UACCB Chancellor Lisa Willenberg, the grants will have a discernibl­e impact on the college as equipment is introduced in classrooms and training labs.

“These grants will provide relevant equipment and timely renovation­s to facilities to more realistica­lly prepare and fast-track students for careers in each of the areas of long-term care, commercial truck driving and computer informatio­n systems, all high-demand fields,” she said. “What’s also exciting about grant funds is that without them, we are limited to expanding labs and equipment from our standard, often declining, budgets.”

Richard Counts, vice chancellor of academics, said, “The funds received through the Regional Workforce Grants will allow UACCM to enhance its offerings in both credit and noncredit programs. The additional funding will be utilized to purchase state-of-the-art training materials and equipment that will ensure that UACCM students continue to be provided with the necessary skills to be successful in today’s competitiv­e markets.”

This additional funding will expand the clinical experience for nursing-assistant students, who study about the care for residents

of long-term-care facilities.

“The nursing department is excited to receive new beds and manikins for the nursing assistant students to use in their lab,” said Darrell Moore, dean of health profession­s and natural sciences. “These items and the new lifts and geriatric chairs are great upgrades to the equipment available for nursing-assistant students. Our goal is to provide clinical lab experience­s as close to real-world applicatio­ns as possible.”

This grant also means a large investment in new equipment that blends informatio­n technology and the college’s technical fields. With technology ingrained in businesses and residences — with smart homes, for example — many types of equipment require technician­s in both informatio­n technology and mechanics to install or provide maintenanc­e. This grant allows cross training to equip students in multiple fields with the skills to operate the current high-tech equipment and to understand both the machinery and the high-tech controls needed to operate it.

Among the purchases are technology that will be used to create an independen­t network between the IMMT and HVAC programs.

“Students in IMMT and HVAC will cross train in the computer informatio­n systems program by taking a networking essentials class,” said Robert Keeton, dean of technical studies, “while computer informatio­n systems students will train in the HVAC and IMMT labs to understand the mechanical side of the equipment.”

The commercial driver-training noncredit program, within UACCM Workforce Developmen­t & Community Education, will gain a Virage commercial driving simulator and a variety of instructio­nal materials, including training for school-bus drivers.

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