60 for 60: Ļć½¶Šć was a pioneer in offering Microelectronics program
In celebration of Ļć½¶Šćnical Community Collegeās 60th anniversary, the College is publishing 60 for 60 ā a storytelling campaign that highlights the people, places, and events that have progressed and shaped the Collegeās six decades of impact. To view more 60 for 60 stories, visit www.durhamtech.edu/60for60.
In the 1980s, electronics, microelectronics, robotics, and technology began to boom in Durham and the Research Triangle Park.āÆ
Leadership at Ļć½¶Šćnical Institute wanted the College to provide the necessary training for those career fields.āÆāÆ
On May 18, 1983, the state board of community colleges approved funding for the development of a microelectronics technology program. This funding allowed Ļć½¶Šć to become one of the first two-year colleges in North Carolina to provide microelectronics training.āÆāÆāÆ
āOn behalf of the Board of Trustees, faculty, staff and students of Ļć½¶Šćnical Institute, allow me to extend our most sincere appreciation for your exemplary efforts which directly resulted in the General Assemblyās appropriation of $200,000.00 in high-technology training funds for upgrading and enhancing Ļć½¶Šćās Microelectronics Technology program and the parallel Electronics Engineering Technology program. We are proud to have the only Microelectronics Technology Associate Degree program in the state,ā said former President Phail Wynn, Jr. in a 1983 letter to Senators Royall and Hancock.
The two-year associate degree program was an expansion of the semiconductor processing courses at the College.āÆāÆ
The program was established to train operators and technicians to work at businesses such as Mitsubishi and Sumitomo.āÆIt provided working knowledge of microelectronic chip manufacturing processes and laboratory skills in measuring, testing, and inspecting microelectronic circuits.āÆIt also taught manufacturing processes, electronic theory and practice applications, and scientific laboratory skills.āÆāÆ
The first cohort of students started the program in January 1984 and completed courses, such as:
- Introduction to Semiconductor and Microelectronics TechnologyāÆ
- Microelectronics Processing and Device DesignāÆ
- Semiconductor Device Analysis and Physical LayoutāÆ
At the time, Dr. Vijay S. Joshi was program director and Tseng-Yuan Woo was one of the first instructors.āÆ
One of Ļć½¶Šćās former Board of Trustee members, James I. Bolden, said the College was very active in the community around this time.āÆ
āĻć½¶Šć is known anywhere in the state for microelectronics instruction and training for new industry,ā Bolden said at the time.
The first graduates of Ļć½¶Šćās Microelectronics Technology program earned their degrees in June 1985, including Alton āBuddyā Jones, Barbara Leak, Jackie Spivey, and Cheryl Sumpter.āÆāÆ
Sumpter said the microelectronics program at Ļć½¶Šć was challenging, fun, and provided a lot of hands-on learning opportunities.
āI decided to go to Ļć½¶Šć because students had a good success rate of getting jobs. Once I graduated from UNC, I couldnāt find a job because I had a liberal arts degree, but when I graduated from Ļć½¶Šć, I scored three job offers with high tech companies,ā said Sumpter.āÆ
Microelectronics was offered at the College from 1983 until the early 90s.
For more information, contact Desiree Towson, M.S., Communications and Public Relations Coordinator, at allisontowsond@durhamtech.edu.