According to a report from the Manufacturing Institute and Deloitte, as many as 3.8 million additional employees could be needed in manufacturing between now and 2033, and nearly 2 million of those jobs could go unfilled if manufacturers fail to address the skills and applicant gaps.
Penn College NBT scholarship recipients are welding & fabrication engineering technology students Michael A. Fuccile, Conyngham; Joey D. Fuhrman, Hanover; Eric R. Hill, Lemont; Caleb M. Hovis, Rock Hill, New York; Nick E. Kane, Hampstead, Maryland; Rachael S. Lamb, Beaver; Connor J. Loeb, Lenhartsville; Cierra D. Miller, Dover; Zachary A. Tallman, Lewisburg; and Matthew J. Woolcock, Oil City.
Other recipients are Lance W. Carbaugh, Orbisonia, welding technology; James T. Johnson, Manheim, manufacturing engineering technology; Noah J. Kapustic, Northampton, automated manufacturing technology; Alec D. Rees, Centerport, New York, manufacturing engineering technology; and Gregory J. Valentino, Ossining, New York, engineering design technology.
For information on manufacturing-related degrees and other majors offered by Penn College’s School of Engineering Technologies, call 570-327-4520.
Penn College is a national leader in applied technology education. Email the Admissions Office or call toll-free at 800-367-9222.