Multiple Advanced Technological Education programs are influencing Metropolitan Community College's (MCC) concept for construction of a Center for Advanced and Emerging Technologies (CAET).
Architects created the concept for the CAET after listening to the leaders of the Midwest Center for Information Technology talk about the competency-based curriculum they have piloted with ATE support and the virtual center by the same name that MCIT now operates to teach information technology (IT) as an enabling technology for various industries.
"We're trying to design a space that is going to be more relevant to what the work will look like," said Tom Pensabene, dean of Information Technology and e-Learning at MCC and principal investigator of MCIT. MCIT is a regional ATE center hosted by AIM, a nonprofit organization created more than a decade ago by the Chamber of Commerce to facilitate the development of IT in Omaha and throughout Nebraska.
Pensabene said the new facility will make it possible to scale innovative programs that MCIT currently offers among the 10 colleges in its consortium, and to attempt new, "more radical approaches" to hands-on learning.