WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — More than 75% of employers nationwide rate the job market for the Class of 2024 as “good to excellent.” Pennsylvania College of Technology’s Spring Career Fair confirmed that healthy prognosis, delivered by a National Association of Colleges and Employers survey.
More than 430 companies, offering thousands of jobs and internships in a range of fields, met with 1,333 students throughout the Feb. 27-28 event, divided between the college’s Bardo Gymnasium and Field House.
“Last spring, when we hosted a single-day Career Fair, we had a wait list of about 290 employers. Bringing back a two-day event allowed us to shrink that wait list and give our students the opportunity to engage with even more employers. There is tremendous demand for our students and the talent that they bring to the workforce,” stated Stacey L. Girven, career & alumni events manager.
From regional companies to global Fortune 500 corporations, several employers cited the hands-on experience that Penn College students receive in the schools of Engineering Technologies; Nursing & Health Sciences; and Business, Arts & Sciences as the primary reason for recruiting on campus.
“The hands-on component distinguishes Penn College students. We think it’s absolutely critical,” said Heather Allison, campus and community ambassador for West Pharmaceutical Services Inc., a designer and manufacturer of injectable pharmaceutical packaging and delivery systems.
A Corporate Tomorrow Maker, West Pharmaceuticals employs nine Penn College graduates at its Williamsport facility, according to Allison. She was recruiting engineering students majoring in plastics, manufacturing and automation.
“A lot of students who go to colleges with straight engineering programs are brilliant, but they don’t get any time on the equipment,” Allison said. “That hands-on component offered at Penn College is key for us.”
UPMC Facilities, part of the integrated global nonprofit health enterprise headquartered in Pittsburgh, hired two full-time employees with extensive practical experience at last fall’s Career Fair. That’s why they returned for the spring edition.
“We know there is a lot of talent coming out of here,” said Curtis Anthony, employment specialist. “We have openings for everything from plumbing to HVAC to electrical. Penn College has some great students in these fields.”
JGM, an industrial construction and fabrication company based in Coatesville, selected six welding engineering interns at recent Penn College Career Fairs. Rob Policastro, health and safety manager for JGM, took all six of those students to dinner on the eve of the Spring Career Fair.
“I felt like my kids were at the table,” Policastro smiled. “It’s about building relationships with the students, watching them grow and then one day come to work full time for the company. It’s very special. The kids who come out of this school have the hands-on experience, are well-educated and are respectful.”
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.
BWX Technologies Inc., a manufacturer and supplier of heavy nuclear components for the U.S. government and military, used past Career Fair recruits to speak with today’s prospects.
Welding engineer Mark A. Jackson, a 2016 graduate, was one of about 180 alumni who represented companies at the Career Fair. He was joined by senior Kevin D. Scharba Jr., of Kane, who has a full-time job waiting for him at BWX when he graduates in May with a bachelor’s degree in welding & fabrication engineering technology.
Ben Grimmett, the company’s unit manager for welding manufacturing operations, said Jackson and Scharba reflect why the Career Fair is a must for the company, located in Lynchburg, Virginia.
“The students seem very top-notch. They’re engaging. They know what they’re talking about,” he said. “There is a lot of concern about the future of welding because of the trade’s aging workforce, but Penn College has created a program that gives me so much optimism. I look forward to working with the college much more in the future.”
Corporate Tomorrow Makers Hardinge Inc. and Bihler of America Inc. have worked with the college in the past year to provide student access to company technology. Both employers returned to campus for the Career Fair.
Hardinge, which designs, manufactures and distributes machine tools, provided the college with an XR 1000 high-performance vertical machining center in the Larry A. Ward Machining Technologies Center.
New Jersey-based Bihler of America, the U.S. distributor of automated manufacturing machines made by the Otto Bihler Co. in Halblech, Germany, entrusted for two years one of its 4 Slide-NC high-tech metal stamping and forming centers in the Gene Haas Center for Innovative Manufacturing.
“We have three hires already working at our company from Penn College,” said Karl Reed, project director at Bihler of America. “We’re very excited to work with the students here because we find that students coming out of Penn College are quality candidates and have done a really good job for us.”