WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Pennsylvania College of Technology electrical students hit a collective home run this spring for Williamsport Area Little League.
The 28 students enrolled in two sections of Construction Lab II-Commercial and their instructor, Darrin S. Morse, spent about five hours a week for nearly a month performing a range of electrical upgrades at the league’s baseball and softball complex in Old Lycoming Township.
“This was a great hands-on experience for the students. They had to run conduits and pull wire, which was part of what we learned this semester,” Morse said. “They produced some good clean work.”
Old Lycoming Township originally pitched the job to the college’s electrical class that performs free labor for area nonprofits. However, the work schedule for that class was full, which opened the opportunity for Morse and his students.
“When I was told that we were going to get real-world experience, I was thrilled,” said Kristen H. Goodman, of Williamsport, who is majoring in electrical construction. “I couldn’t wait to apply some of the classroom skills to real-life applications.”
Connor Kocsis, of Dickson City, echoed that sentiment.
“I was excited to work on a real-world project because we would get experience in the field while also helping the local community,” he said. Like Goodman, Kocsis is seeking an associate degree in electrical construction.
The students’ work focused on the complex’s concession stand. There, they improved power distribution, upgraded the lighting to LED lighting, rewired the kitchen and replaced worn out cooking-area power outlets. The students – many in just their second semester – also installed security lighting for the concession stand and other buildings and added receptacles and lighting to a pavilion.