ONEONTA, N.Y. — SUNY Oneonta’s Extended and Community Learning (ExCL) Center on Oct. 2 held a ceremony to recognize students who earned a microcredential from their involvement in a manufacturing bootcamp. Nine Otsego and Delaware County residents completed the new program, described as an “intensive” four-week effort designed to prepare workers for local manufacturing jobs, […]
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ONEONTA, N.Y. — SUNY Oneonta’s Extended and Community Learning (ExCL) Center on Oct. 2 held a ceremony to recognize students who earned a microcredential from their involvement in a manufacturing bootcamp.
Nine Otsego and Delaware County residents completed the new program, described as an “intensive” four-week effort designed to prepare workers for local manufacturing jobs, per the SUNY Oneonta announcement.
“I saw an opportunity to get out into the workforce and find a long-term career without having to move outside my community,” Jayden Trask, a Sidney resident who completed program, said in the school’s announcement. “The program taught me more than I expected. My goal now is to find a job where I can be my best … maybe operate a CNC machine and become a programmer in the future.”
Under the program, students completed 100 hours of classroom instruction at the ExCL Center; 20 hours of hands-on instruction at local manufacturing facilities; and two days resume writing and mock interviewing with the SUNY Oneonta Career Planning and Networking Center.
Students also toured five local manufacturing companies to learn more about their products and production.
“SUNY Oneonta’s Advanced Manufacturing Training is an accelerated program with a clear end goal,” Misty Fields, director of the SUNY Oneonta Extended and Community Learning (ExCL) Center, said. “Since its ribbon cutting last year, the SUNY Oneonta ExCL Center has actively pursued opportunities to deliver workforce development initiatives tailored to the needs of our regional industries. This program was designed with flexible instruction and applied learning experiences to directly address the priorities of our local employers. As a result, participants are now prepared for manufacturing careers or registered apprenticeship programs.”
In-person and hands-on classes covered a wide-range of instruction from technical writing to manufacturing safety, blueprint reading, measuring devices, hand tools, battery assembly, soldering and shop-floor math. Local manufacturers — Brooks Manufacturing in Unadilla, Ioxus in Oneonta, and Custom Electronics — hosted students in their facilities for tours and more direct instruction alongside manufacturing professionals, the school said.
Upon successful completion, the training program offered participants a $1,000 stipend, transportation assistance, a laptop, job interviews and placement support.
The workforce-development initiative was made possible through the combined efforts and funding of SUNY Oneonta, SUNY Broome, SUNY Pre-Apprenticeship Program, the New York State Department of Labor RADAR Grant program, the Oneonta Working Solutions office and the workforce development board of Herkimer, Madison and Oneida counties.


