View this email in your web browser

Brought to you by 
Higher Ed Works

Forsyth Tech: What is it that Stokes County needs?

WALNUT COVE (March 17, 2022) – When Forsyth Technical Community College set out to start a campus in Stokes County, college officials didn’t assume – they asked.

“We try to meet the individual needs of the counties that we serve,” Forsyth Tech President Janet Spriggs says in the accompanying video, explaining that the college serves both Forsyth and Stokes counties. In Forsyth County, programs are tailored to the employers of Forsyth.

“In Stokes County, that looks very different than Forsyth County – but we’re doing the same thing,” Spriggs says.

Rather than simply pronounce what programs the Stokes campus would offer, the college surveyed Stokes residents to understand what they wanted from their community college.

“What is it that Stokes County needs from their community college to be able to provide a gateway for students to get into a college-transfer pathway, or to provide them with career and technical education that they need?” Spriggs asks.

The survey revealed great interest in Early College, where a student enrolls in high school and community college at the same time and can earn both a high-school diploma and a two-year college degree – for free.

“They loved the Early College model, because it helps students get a head start on college and getting ready for a bachelor’s degree or an associate’s degree,” Spriggs says.

Stokes folks also wanted to focus on the trades. The Stokes campus offers licensed practical nursing, welding and plumbing. A new trade center opened at the Walnut Cove center in 2020 to provide hands-on career and technical or vocational training that residents said they want.

“It helps prepare people to own their own businesses or to work in these industries right here at home,” Spriggs says, “and be able to live in beautiful Stokes County.” 

Watch video >>

 

‘Customized training just for them’

WINSTON-SALEM (March 17, 2022) – One of the reasons they’re called community colleges is they provide precisely the training that local employers – and employees – need.

“At Forsyth Technical Community College, that means we work with employers like Reynolds American,” President Janet Spriggs says in the accompanying video.

​​

“We provide for them education – training for their workers in whatever area they need that support … customized training just for them.”

For example, Forsyth Tech has helped Reynolds managers with “crucial-conversations” training – how to have difficult conversations with employees – as well as instruction as varied as leadership training and safety training.

“We focus on who our employers are, and then what kinds of customized skills they need their workforce to have – and we provide it, usually, at their locations for them,” Spriggs says.

That’s pretty hard to beat.

Watch video >>

LITTLETON – 28 years later, NC schools still seeking Leandro case's promise of a 'sound basic education'
RALEIGH – Mary Ann Wolf: N.C. has waited too long for every child to have access to a sound basic education
FAYETTEVILLE – USA TODAY’s Women of the Year: The woman behind the Moderna vaccine
GREENVILLE – Point taken: ECU’s Rogers tackles enrollment, health care challenges
CHAPEL HILL – UNC unveils program to help young people find jobs in NC's 100 counties
RALEIGH – Goodnight and Lee: Critics are wrong. The evidence on NC Pre-K is clear.
WASHINGTON – In wake of bomb threats, HBCUs to receive federal funding for student security, mental health
CHAPEL HILL – UNC professor and entrepreneur will soon travel to space with ‘SNL’ star Pete Davidson
RALEIGH – Start saving for your child’s future today with an NC 529 account
CHARLOTTE – Are you a college student working in Charlotte? These companies will help pay your tuition
WASHINGTON – Pause on student loan payments could be extended
FAYETTEVILLE – Fayetteville State chancellor: We are building a better, stronger FSU
FAYETTEVILLE – Fayetteville State University is top 10 most affordable HBCU in the US
GREENSBORO – UNC-Greensboro is helping train Moldovan nurses to care for Ukrainian refugees
CHARLOTTE – Time for organic growth: Charlotte prof predicts stable economy in 2022
CHAPEL HILL – UNC professor explains why he resigned as vice chancellor after plagiarism incident
CHAPEL HILL – UNC’s journalism school names a new dean after months in the national spotlight
WILMINGTON – UNC Wilmington’s Lumina Festival returns with world-class reggae, comedy, music
 

Copyright © 2022 Higher Ed Works, All rights reserved.

Unsubscribe or Manage Your Preferences