Yavapai Community College has been expanding its advertising and marketing efforts with a focus on the Verde Valley since Dr. Lisa Rhine became president. That is very good news.
However, some of its marketing, the Blog suggests, could use improvement. For example, the 20 page Yavapai Community College “Fall 2021 Verde Valley/Sedona Enrollment Guide,” which as a marketing tool is a great idea, appears to lack the kind of important details about the Trades Skills courses offered at the newly constructed Trades Skills Center that should be expected. The “Guide” began arriving in many Verde Valley mailboxes the last week of July.
The “Guide” devotes the first four opening pages to full-page efforts aimed at encouraging interest in Skills Center enrollment on the Verde Campus. But it falls far short of providing detailed information regarding starting dates. Only by digging through the Community College’s Registration website will a person discover that some of the trades courses begin in August while others begin in October. And there are other problems.
The “Guide” lists and describes the four courses one must complete to obtain a Residential Trades/Construction certificate. However, only when one searches the Community College’s Registration website is it discovered which of the four is actually being offered this fall. (Turns out only one of four listed is offered this fall.)
The “Guide” also lists the four courses required to obtain a Residential Plumbing Certificate. However, only one course is offered in the fall, according to the Community College’s Registration web site.
The Residential Electrical Certificate requires completion of five courses. However, only two of them are being offered in the fall. Something you cannot discover reading the “Guide.”
The HVAC Technician Certificate is the most unusual in terms of the fall offerings, start dates, and options. None of which are clearly noted in the “Guide.” A certificate requires completion of eight courses, only four of which are offered in the fall. Two of the courses start in October and a third in August. A fourth course is offered on-line, in an eight week format and another is offered in a 16 week format. Students in the Verde Valley may take the course on-line or in the 16 week live format. Students in Prescott can take the course on-line or in an eight-week live format. None of the flexibility is indicated in the “Guide.”
It is noted that the Community College does not offer flexible hours or dates for the Basic Carpentry course. It is an eight-credit course required in three of the four Trades Certificates. For efficiency, it is assumed, the Community College will teach this course to students in the three Certificate courses at the same time, in the same room, with the same instructor. You must dig a lot to find this out on the College’s Registration web site.
It is also noted that the “Guide” has yet to appear on-line.
The charts below were prepared by the Blog staff to indicate the dates, times and options available to students taking the courses in the four Trade Certificate programs offered on the Verde Campus at the Trades Center.
The Yavapai Community College administration has decided to construct up to three houses to showcase the ability of its recently purchased 3D concrete printers. The project will go forward at the Chino Valley Agribusiness Center Property in Chino Valley. Although Third District Governing Board representative Paul Chevalier has raised questions about the use of the machines on the Verde Campus (there are two of them), so far, the College has not indicated it intends to use the machines in any program at that site.
The announcement of the decision to build up to three showcase houses came in the December 2020 Facilities Management Newsletter. (https://www.yc.edu/v6/facilities/docs/newsletters/2020-12-facilities-management-newsletter.pdf) The Community College is now preparing to provide electrical, data, and water services to the construction site at the Chino Valley Center to support the construction.
Recall that in February 2020 the Yavapai Community College District Governing Board authorized the expenditure of a half million dollars to purchase two futuristic 3d construction printers (a big one and a little one). The printers can be used to print out construction materials. Then, the materials can be used to construct a building with minimal labor. According to information supplied the College, the big machine may reduce construction costs from 40% to 70% on some structures.
At the time of the announcement, the decision was made to use the machine in an experimental program set to open at the Chino Valley Center in the fall 2020. At the time, the College said the machine would be used to build a small manufactured home owned by the College that is need of repair.
In the short video below, Dr. Diane Ryan explains how the 3d printer works.
The first architectural sketches for the Skilled Trades Center building on the Verde Campus have been released. (See below.) The Center will be located between buildings A and L on the Verde Valley Campus.
The College states that the building “is being programmed for Residential Construction, Residential Electrical, HVAC, and Plumbing. The building will be approximately 10,000 square feet of shop space with restrooms and faculty offices. There will also be covered exterior space for additional activities associated with these programs. It is anticipated that earthwork will begin in early December and building erection beginning at the end of January. The goal is to have the building ready for students for the 2021 fall semester.”
Below is the first sketch of the new building released by the Community College.
There is a great story written by J.J. McCormick in the September Yavapai Community College newsletter about Gwendolin “Gwen” Foley. She is now 46 and enjoying a high-paying job with a Flagstaff medical device manufacturer because of her certificate in industrial machine maintenance from Yavapai Community College.
She began he quest for the certificate while living in Williams, Arizona and commuting to the Career and Technical Education Center at the Prescott airport, which is about 70 miles one way. In his story, McCormick provides insight into the determination behind obtaining that certificate. McCormick writes:
Gwen, now 46, recalled thinking at the time that she was too old to go back to school. She recalls also wondering if she would be happy working in manufacturing for 20 more years, or longer. The answer: “That’s a long time. In two years I could have the job I want and work until I retire doing what I want and making more money.”
That self-reflection, her family’s support, and her employer’s tuition reimbursement program combined to convince Gwen to enroll in YC’s Advanced Manufacturing Program at the Career and Technical Education Center in Prescott. The program offered Gwen exactly what she needed for the job at WL Gore that she had set her sights on – courses like electronics, welding and hydraulics – without requiring English and other undergraduate classes she didn’t need. YC instructors would direct Gwen to scholarships when she couldn’t afford needed supplies, or would teach her during their office hours when a class conflicted with her work schedule. “They were very accommodating,” Gwen said of her YC instructors. “If you ask, they will help you get through.”
Gwen’s work ethic and drive to succeed twice earned her the Advanced Manufacturing Program’s Outstanding Student award. CTEC Professor Charles Allmon described Gwen as a “natural leader” who was always organized and prepared for class. “She shouldered a leadership role with her fellow students as a true leader does. A true leader also brings everyone around him/her along with them. Gwen has this quality.”
The Advanced Machinery lab in Building “L” on the Verde Campus is taking shape. The Machinery lab has 3D printers, robotics, CNC machinery and other item to help prepare Verde Valley students for the workforce. In this photo, electricians are installing electrical lines to operate the equipment in the lab.
The brand new nursing labs in Building “L” on the Verde Campus are in full operation. The nursing training equipment, some of which can been seen in the photos below, includes hospital beds and human health simulators.
Yavapai Community College Fire Science Program Interim Director Mikayla Baker expressed her appreciation to the City of Prescott and the Prescott Fire Department for the donation of a fire truck to the College at a handover ceremony July 21. “We are extremely grateful to the City of Prescott and the Prescott Fire Department for the generous donation,” she said.
Dean John Morgan said that “This generous donation immediately helps two of our YC programs: Fire Science, where our existing trucks are 30 years old or more, as well as our Diesel Program, where students can get the donated truck back to operational form in various Diesel Tech course.””
Students in the autobody, automotive paint, and upholstery curricula may also be called upon in the future to maintain the engine as needed.
Prescott Fire Chief Dennis Light explained that the donation came about when the College learned that the Prescott Fire Department was preparing to decommission one of its engines, which was past its service life. The Community College worked with the Fire Department and City of Prescott Fleet Services to provide the ways and means for transferring ownership. The transfer was approved by a unanimous vote of the Prescott City Council.
Chief Light said that “The Prescott Fire Department values its historic partnership with Yavapai College, and is hopeful that the engine donated will provide future students the best tools in which to learn and acquire the knowledge, skills, and abilities to serve the quad-city area as a firefighter in the not too distant future.”
The final touches are being put in place on Building “L” on the Verde Campus. It is ready for fall semester.
As the following photo from the July College Maintenance Update shows, grounds crews have completed landscaping the south side of the facility, as seen in the photo below.
The District Governing Board was informed at its April meeting that efforts to obtain an agreement for a five-year lease on property located about half-way between Cottonwood and Camp Verde on highway 260 for a Career and Technical Education Center (CTE) fell through. Vice President Clint Ewell reported that a five-year proposal was sent to the owners of certain property on highway 260 with the expectation they would agree to it. However, at the last minute they decided to sell the land to another entity rather than lease it to the Community College for a CTE facility.
The Community College said it will continue to look for other property to possibly lease in the area.
The Community College indicated it is determined to open a CTE in the Verde Valley by 2021. Funds to build a CTE facility on the Clarkdale Campus were put back into the budget should the College be unable to lease an appropriate facility.
You may view the approximately eight minute discussion by the Board and College regarding the capital budget and a possible Verde Valley Community College Career and Technical Education Center in the video clip below.