Allison Leta, human relations manager for Chance Aluminum Corp. in Williamsport, recruited students from a variety of manufacturing-related majors. A Corporate Tomorrow Maker, Chance Aluminum is a domestic supplier for AA Metals Inc., a Florida-based master distributor with global operations.
“We’re trying to promote manufacturing in central Pennsylvania and keep people here,” Leta said. “We are looking to expand from a one-shift operation to a three-shift operation, and we’re growing from about 45 employees to about 115 in the next couple of years.”
The company’s need for technically skilled workers brought Leta to Penn College.
“There’s a lot of hands-on experience that students receive here as opposed to other colleges,” she said.
Students most in demand at the Career Fair are in a mix of majors related to manufacturing, welding, electronics, electrical technology and heavy equipment, according to Stacey L. Girven, career and alumni events manager. “However, there were tremendous job and internship opportunities for all of our tomorrow makers,” she said.
Tomorrow makers like freshman architecture student Laura M. Mausteller, of Mifflinville, and junior plastics & polymer engineering technology major Kevin T. Ronayne, of Havertown. Both were on the hunt for internships.
“It’s incredible that this big of an event is helping so many kids get jobs and internships,” Mausteller said.
“It’s really amazing that the college is able to bring in this many employers,” Ronayne added. “I have friends who go to other schools, and they are searching high and low just to find someone to talk to.
“I want to get an internship in processing, work my way up to a job and keep going.”
Often an internship will lead to a full-time position. The 2023 Internship and Co-op Survey Report from the National Association of Colleges and Employers found that 57.6% of eligible interns were converted into full-time employees.
That’s the preferred path for Chris Keiser, director of operations for architecture and engineering at Brix Design Group, a Williamsport-based architectural design, site design and landscape architecture company.
The 1995 Penn College landscape/nursery technology graduate likes to hire students part time and advance them to an internship before they take on a full-time role.
“That way they’re not thrown into the fire,” Keiser said.
He followed that process with 2023 graduate Jacob Pusateri, who was also stationed at the Brix Design Group booth. Pusateri, recipient of an associate degree in architecture technology and a bachelor’s in building science & sustainable design, received a full-time offer months before his graduation.
“I know that Penn College students are going to come out ready to work, and that’s big,” Keiser explained. “They’re going to have the technical knowledge to come out of the gate to be productive in the office.”
Twenty companies returned to campus after the Career Fair to interview about 140 students for internships and full-time positions.
“The overwhelming response to the Career Fair from both employers and students serves as a clear validation of Penn College’s commitment to applied technology education,” Moore said. “It’s obvious why Penn College has an overall graduate placement rate of 96%.”
“I’ve never seen so many companies, employers looking to hire people,” summed up freshman Rachael S. Lamb, of Beaver, majoring in welding & fabrication engineering technology. “The opportunities that are here for students are incredible.”
Penn College’s next Career Fair will be Feb. 27-28.
For information on Penn College, a national leader in applied technology education, email the Admissions Office or call toll-free 800-367-9222.