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Ivy Tech Community College Adds Apprenticeships For Industrial IOT

A worker at a factory in North Vernon, Indiana, works with a plastics manufacturing robot.
A worker at a factory in North Vernon, Indiana, works with a plastics manufacturing robot.

Ivy Tech Community College is beginning a new apprenticeship program that will place students in emerging career fields around internet-connected factory robots. It's being funded by a nearly $4 million grant from the U.S. Department of Labor.

The program will run for four years and aims to put more than 3,000 apprentices in Indiana manufacturing companies. Students will earn credentials in automation and robotics. It’s part of a push some are calling  the “fourth industrial revolution” that focuses on automation and data collection.

Sue Smith is the vice president of Advanced Manufacturing, Engineering, and Applied Science at Ivy Tech. She says more advanced and internet-connected machines are already in many Indiana factories. 

“As a college, we need to make sure that our faculty, our labs, and our curriculum is where it needs to be to support this new technology,” Smith says. 

The federal DOL grant was just one of 28 nationwide grants to create more apprenticeships between public schools and private employers. 

Contact Justin at  jhicks@wvpe.org or follow him on Twitter at  @Hicks_JustinM.

Justin Hicks covers statewide workforce development and employment issues. Before moving to Indiana, Justin was a freelance journalist and audio producer in New York City covering a variety of topics from crime to classical music. Justin is a graduate of New York University's Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute and Appalachian State University.