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Technology center engaging students, training future workforce

Students apply math and science skills in classes they find relevant at United Technologies Center in Bangor.

Education Commissioner Stephen Bowen speaks with Robotics Engineering instructor Ron Canarr during his visit to United Technologies Center in Bangor.

BANGOR — The students who attend United Technologies Center are engaged in their work, and they finish high school with skills that immediately qualify them to work on construction sites, at auto dealerships, in hospitals and elsewhere.

It can also give them a leg up if they go on to college. More than three quarters of them do, and most of those students graduate from college.

Maine’s largest vocational education center was the first stop for Education Commissioner Stephen Bowen on Thursday, the second day of his statewide listening tour.

Bowen toured the school, met with Penobscot- and Piscataquis-area superintendents and ate a lunch with teachers prepared by students in the United Technologies Center culinary arts program.

United Technologies Center — which accepts students from more than 30 communities — partners with area businesses to train their future employees. In exchange, car manufacturers donate vehicles for students to work on and John Deere donates front-end loaders for students to operate.

“If we say, ‘We want a blank,’ it arrives because we produce their workforce,” Center director Fred Woodman told Bowen.

The students in John Milligan’s construction classes operate like a construction crew. One student is the foreman; another is charged with overseeing safety. Crew members put together bids for jobs and follow through.

Last year, Milligan’s students performed more than $400,000 worth of community service construction work.

Bowen had a chance to see several other initiatives in action at the United Technologies Center:

“Vocational education at the high school level has sort of been pushed to the back burner,” Bowen said.

But the vocational centers play a critical role in educating Maine’s workforce, Bowen said. “There are kids who are getting job skills and going right out into the market or going to college.”

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