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Four classes comprise the Front Line Supervisor Fall Series being offered by Workforce Development & Continuing Education at Pennsylvania College of Technology beginning in October. Each of the following classes will meet in Room 312 of Penn College’s Klump Academic Center on successive Tuesdays, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., at a cost of $625: Performance Management (Oct.
Registrants paid $10 per vehicle to participate, with all proceeds going to charity. Penn College Police Officer Charles E. O'Brien showed off his restored labor of love: a 1929 Model A Ford that honors the very history of law enforcement. Car enthusiasts check out the vehicles on display, which vied for awards in varied categories, both antique and modern.
Back row (from left): Jackson M. Murray, Hawley, welding technology; Darien J. Ketterer, Cranberry Township, plastics and polymer engineering technology; Andrew A. Smith, Philadelphia, aviation maintenance technology; and Ryan P. Dortone, Doylestown, engineering design technology. Front row (from left): Justin R. Souliere, Macungie, engineering design technology; Dustin O.
Lyndsey Diehl, who received a bachelor’s degree in health information management online in 2013, secured the position of trauma data quality specialist with the Pennsylvania Trauma Systems Foundation. Joseph Travagline had a healthy career in IT before seeking work in health care.
A leadership program offered this fall by Workforce Development & Continuing Education at Pennsylvania College of Technology focuses on mid-level managers and those aspiring to move into those positions. Classes for the Mid-Level Manager Program will be held in the Klump Academic Center on Penn College’s main campus from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays (Oct. 18; Nov. 1, 15 and 29; and Dec. 13).
Pennsylvania College of Technology men’s and women’s soccer team tasted action in the North Eastern Athletic Conference for the first time last week with split results. FLASHBACK Golf On Tuesday at the Elizabethtown College Invitational, the Wildcats tied for 12th among 28 teams with a 322 score. Stevenson “Green” won with a 302.
PCToday continues its regular feature: welcoming new full-time and regular part-time Pennsylvania College of Technology employees, as reported by the Human Resources Office. Heather M. Shuey, full-time Director of Development and Compliance, Human Resources; effective Sept. 25 Gary L. Lomison, regular part-time Dining Services Worker I, beginning Sept.
Pennsylvania College of Technology students regularly apply their skills to help others – even before graduation. That’s the case with Shakeem J. Thomas, an emergency management technology student from Brooklyn, New York, who’s lending a hand in the nearby Queens neighborhood of Broad Channel where residents are still recovering – five years later – from Hurricane Sandy.
Under the watch of Barbie D. Harbaugh, instructor of nursing, Bryce J. Merrill administers a flu shot to Kaitlyn E. Miller, a student in applied health studies, radiography concentration. Kaitlyn L. Andersen, of Mastic, N.Y., enrolled in the Fundamentals of Nursing course, swabs the arm of classmate Emily L. Tashner-Thompson, of Muncy. Jessica M.
Kathryn Ecker (left), an organizational-development professional, discusses leadership solutions to support business strategies. Gerald A. Welshans, consultant/instructor with the National Sustainable Structures Center, shares energy insights with guests. In the mechatronics engineering technology lab, visitors “talk shop” with Thomas W. Fry (right), industrial technology specialist.