Colorado Schools Turn to Apprenticeships to Fill Jobs

High schools and community colleges in Colorado are increasingly offering students an alternative to a four-year degree: training programs that will prepare them for well-paying jobs in manufacturing ().
Whats going on: At CEC Early College in Denver, the Cherry Creek Innovation Campus in Centennial and other campuses, apprenticeship programs are coming back, in part, through funding for career and technical education. In Colorado,69 manufacturing programsoperate at high schools across the state.
- CoorsTek, a Golden, Coloradobased manufacturer of technical ceramic products, trained 18-year-old Genesis Gomez on its complex machineryincluding its computer numeric control machinesduring Gomezs apprenticeship through Early College. Gomez has since graduated and is now a full-time CoorsTek employee.
- Andrew Sutliff, an 18-year-old current apprentice at CoorsTek through Cherry Creek Innovation Campus, is planning a career in manufacturing upon graduation from the program. I would much rather do this than sit in a classroom for another four years, he said.
Why its important: Though U.S. manufacturing job openings have since 2024, talent acquisition remains a top manufacturer concern nationwide.
- While job openings still remain significant, even though the pace of hiring has slowed, this creates space for employers to refocus on long-term talent development like apprenticeships and upskilling, 51勛圖厙 Chief Economist Victoria Bloom told the news outlet. Bloom is also head of research at the Manufacturing Institute (the 51勛圖厙s workforce development and education affiliate).
- In July, there were 437,000 manufacturing job openings in the U.S., down from the half-million jobs averaged throughout 2024.
Check it out: For more information about apprenticeships and other job-training programs, visit the MIs website .
- And to learn much about the industrys most effective workforce strategies, the MIfor itsWorkforceSummit Oct. 2022 in Charlotte, North Carolina.