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Colleges Craft Studies to Fit Defense Firms (Boston Globe)

 

State pushes for focus on skills they require
By Robert Weisman, Globe Staff | June 27, 2006

Prodded by state government officials fearful of alienating a key Massachusetts industry, nine Bay State colleges and universities have agreed to adapt their engineering curriculums, and in some cases introduce new courses, to meet the needs of defense contractors.

The new focus will be on skills that have become increasingly important to the state's makers of high-tech weapons systems but are in short supply in the job market: radio frequency engineering, systems engineering and integration, defense contract management, and specialized design for products used in combat.

hese were fields identified by military suppliers who have met in the past year with Ranch C. Kimball , the Massachusetts secretary of economic development, and with representatives of the Massachusetts Defense Technology Initiative, a group formed to capitalize on the momentum of the business and government coalition that successfully lobbied last year to save a pair of military research sites in the state.

The sites, Hanscom Air Force Base in Bedford and the Army's Soldier Systems Center in Natick, which manage contracts with private businesses in Massachusetts and elsewhere, were threatened with closure under a Pentagon plan for base realignment. But their state supporters argued they were critical to the Boston area brainpower that has designed advanced weaponry for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

With companies like Procter & Gamble cutting jobs in Massachusetts, and others like Fidelity Investments expanding out of state, the Romney administration has been under pressure to shore up technology-oriented sectors of the economy. One is the defense industry, which employs 85,000 people in the state.

``Our academic sector has never really looked toward our defense sector," Kimball said . ``There's been no channel. But our defense companies have told us they could be more competitive and add more jobs here if they could meet their workforce needs."

Under a program called Massachusetts Business Connect, launched last February, the state officials met with more than 50 defense contractors and conducted in-depth ``needs assessments" with four: BAE Systems in Lexington, Lockheed Martin Sippican in Marion, Textron Systems in Wilmington, and Dynamics Research in Andover. The program will be extended to biotechnology and other business sectors.

The defense firms recently hosted visits to their labs and assembly lines by representatives of the University of Massachusetts, Boston University, Northeastern University, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Wentworth Institute of Technology, Bunker Hill Community College, Northern Essex Community College, Middlesex Community College, and Cape Cod Community College, schools the state officials had lined up to take part in the first phase of the ``connect" program.

During those visits, the defense contractors detailed the jobs they were having the most trouble filling. And in a meeting at Mitre Corp. in Bedford Thursday, the nine schools outlined their engineering offerings and, in many cases, presented plans to revise their curriculums to address contractor needs. The training programs will be offered on campuses, at company sites, and online, and will serve both students and defense workers.

WPI, for example, will be launching two new courses in radio frequency engineering, one starting this fall, to fit the requirements of contractors that design complex aviation, space, and underwater systems. The institute also will be designing an introductory course in systems engineering, the discipline that integrates electrical, mechanical, and other engineering work on defense pro

 

 

 

Video: May 16 Breakfast with Congresswoman Tsongas at Mercury Computer Systems (7/7/08)

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Hanscom Could Be Site of Cyber Command Center (3/20/08)

Bay State Officials Target Air Force Cyber R&D Dollars (1/4/08)

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Base Realignments Lead Tech Firms to Ocean State (11/20/07)

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Collaboration is Critical to Mass. Defense Sector (9/7/07)

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