Community College Training for Managing Green
Job
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/26/education/26GREEN.html?_r=1&emc=eta1
Published: August 25, 2010
BEYOND “green-collar” jobs, like retrofitting
a home to conserve energy or helping build a wind farm, an
energy-conscious economy will need a new generation of environmentally
smart managers, and that’s where community colleges are stepping up with new
courses and degree programs.
The federal government is pouring $500 million into training for green
jobs, and the sector devoted to energy efficiency is estimated to grow
as much as fourfold in the next decade, to some 1.3 million people,
according to the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Its
March 2010 report was financed by the Energy Department.
Green-collar jobs have grabbed the public’s attention, and
educational institutions are starting programs to train the managers
who will oversee the technologies, manufacturing processes and
materials that will be used to conserve energy and help safeguard
natural resources.
Some community colleges already are offering two-year degrees in
environmental management and certificates for managers who want to add
green qualifications - which means learning more about the
environmental aspects of a particular field - to their résumés.
These colleges are offering some courses and training on campus as
well as online.
Lane Community College, in Eugene, Ore., for example, is offering
two-year programs - for associate degrees in applied sciences - in
energy management, renewable energy or water conservation.
The college, which has an organic garden and changed its faucets and
toilets to conserve water, was an early proponent of environmental
education, and its degree programs are serving as models for 10 other
community colleges, according to Roger Ebbage, director of energy
programs at the college’s Northwest Energy Education Institute.
“When we first started two decades ago we were focused on community
and residential energy efficiency,” Mr. Ebbage said. “Now we are
preparing people to go into the commercial sector anywhere in the
country.”
The graduates are in great demand, said Mr. Ebbage.
“They are working for utilities, on engineering jobs, for school
districts, cities and the military,” he said. “We’re not going
to be in areas where there is no job demand,” he added, noting that
some short-term green job training programs have been criticized
because they do not always lead to employment in the current
economy.
The demand for its managerial graduates prompted Lane Community
College to accelerate its two-year program, with help from federal
money, starting this month. The college is beginning a trial program
that allows students to earn their energy management degrees in fewer
academic terms. Their tuition is subsidized as part of the federal
stimulus funds for green courses and training, including a $2,500
tuition tax credit.
Matthew Heflin, 49, decided to get his energy management degree after
spending 18 years working at a Hewlett-Packard lab that researched new
products. Mr. Heflin, a military veteran who does not have a college
degree, wanted to be prepared for the green economy.
“I was first interested in wind or solar, but then I heard about the
energy management program,” said Mr. Heflin, whose previous job had
been eliminated. “Now I’m taking math, physics and three energy
management classes, including sustainability.”
Mr. Heflin is among the program’s 25 students, most 25 to 55 years
old and many displaced from industries like computers and aerospace.
Math and sciences are part of the program, so applicants have to have
at least an algebra background.
The students can also take the college’s other continuing education
courses, including sustainable landscaping, and cross-disciplinary
courses like natural resource economics, environmental politics and
global ecology.
Last year, the college won a $890,000 grant from the federal
government - not stimulus money - for its accelerated program. An
additional grant is being used to help 10 other community colleges
across the country begin or enhance their programs in energy
management over a three-year period, said Mr. Ebbage.
Those colleges include American River College in Sacramento; Northeast
Wisconsin Technical College in Green Bay; Delaware Technical and
Community College; and West Virginia University, in Parkersburg.
Delaware Technical and Community College, which has campuses in Dover,
Georgetown and Wilmington, will be offering an applied energy program
to train energy managers and “green power” technicians starting in
September, said Stephanie Smith, the college’s academic vice
president.
“Lane is the national leader in this program, and we are modeling
our program on them,” she said. The college plans to offer a
two-year associate’s degree in applied science, first in energy
management and then, starting in the 2011 academic year, in
solar energy management.
The program, which opened student enrollment this month, will have 30
students, both entering freshmen and older people trying to retool
their skills, said Ms. Smith.
Such training is also being offered in rural areas, with online
environmental degrees and certificates, according to a survey of 321
community colleges by researchers at the University of Louisville’s National Research
Center for Career and Technical Education.
Rod P. Githens, one of the authors and assistant professor of work
force education at the University of Louisville, said many of the
green learning programs were for workers in transition and required
education beyond a high school diploma but less than a four-year
degree.
A few, like the College of Southern Maryland, in La Plata, offer
management programs, including one in environmental planning, and a
separate program in environmental management. These programs provide a
letter of recognition, and not a degree.
For those seeking a four-year degree, the Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory study found that about two dozen four-year colleges and
universities across the country offer degree programs with courses
that are directly relevant to the energy efficiency
sector.
A version of this article appeared in print on
August 26, 2010, on page F8 of the New York edition.
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