Momentum - Business to Business Online Magazine MOMENTUM August 2017 | Page 17
How COM Students
Graduate With Diplomas
– and Job Offers
By: Rebecca Sauer
Communications Coordinator
College of the Mainland
[email protected]
The first male in his family to graduate from high school,
Curtis Ward, of Texas City, enrolled in COM’s Process
Technology Program. He soon landed an internship at
Marathon Petroleum Galveston Bay Refinery.
“I had three job offers before graduation,” said Ward, who
earned a two-year degree in process technology and is
working at Marathon.
Ward is one of the many COM students who find that their
best opportunities don’t happen in a classroom but
in boundless opportunities through COM’s internships,
clinicals, professors with decades of experience and college
partnerships.
“COM professors prepared me,” said Ward, who is also
working toward a bachelor’s in chemical engineering.
Clinicals: For COM Health Information Management
Program graduate Natalia Green, clinicals in medical coding
led to a job in the health care field.
“A manager at University of Texas Medical Branch noticed I
was doing a good job and offered me a job,” said Green,
who works as a medical coder. “We code diagnoses so the
hospital is reimbursed for treatment. After coding, we send
files to the billing department. You have to be able to work
on your own and detail-oriented.”
Green and other students rotated through several types of
health care facilities to observe firsthand which fit their
interests.
“As the field grows, there are opportunities; you can work in
a clinic or hospital,” said Green.
Experienced professors: COM industrial education students
learn from 18 industrial education instructors’ combined 567
years of work experience. That pays off for students who
learn through instructors’ stories and examples gleaned
from an average of 31.5 years on the job.
“Teaching provides an opportunity to share what I know and
love. This allows me to express my experiences, lessons
learned and their application to my students,” said
instructor Ernesto Martinez, who has 24 years’ experience in
the air-conditioning field.
Business and industry partnerships: Preparing students to
succeed in the workplace starts with asking employers what
they value in employees. In COM workforce programs,
instructors have created advisory boards of professionals to
do just that.
In the COM Graphic/Web Design Program, representatives
Del Papa, Moody Gardens and Santa Fe ISD and other local
organizations come once a year to talk about trends in an
ever-changing field.
“These advisory committees build opportunities for
students,” said graphic design instructor Coleena Jackson,
adding that often representatives hire students for
internships. “They tell me what skill set they expect of an
entry-level employee.”
In the Medical Assistant Program, instructors and individuals
working in hospitals and clinics convene to discuss medical
best practices and needed skills in employees.
“I like giving my feedback from an employer's point of view,
what we’re looking for. I want to do something to continue
to improve the program,” said advisory board member and
COM graduate Reshmi Dutt, who works for the University of
Texas Medical Branch.
Stackable credentials: Many COM programs have
certificates that le