Ask Douglas Mann why Computer-Aided Drafting and Design is important and he’ll have a ready answer.
“Look around this room,” he said in a recent interview. “Everything in this room was drafted: the light fixtures, the computer monitors, the desks and chairs, the building itself. Everything in here, somebody had to draw so that somebody else could make it.”
For Mann, a Computer-Aided Drafting and Design Technology professor at Kellogg Community College, it’s simple: As long as people are making things, there has to be somebody who draws those things to be made, and those people are usually CAD graduates.
“They say a picture’s worth a thousand words, and that’s what it’s all about in here,” Mann said. “We draw the pictures that speak the thousand words.”
The cutting edge
The two-year CAD Program at KCC offers an occupational degree designed to enable graduates to enter the workforce with an in-demand, marketable skill offering immediate value to employers. About half of the graduates continue their education in pursuit of advanced degrees in engineering. Many other students who take CAD courses are preparing to transfer into architecture or other related programs.
Mann said employers in all industries – from plastic and injection molding to tool and die making to product design and manufacturing – are interested in hiring CAD graduates, who upon graduation will have a firm grasp on the latest editions of the two major industry software platforms, AutoCAD (used for two-dimensional drawing) and SolidWorks (used for three-dimensional drawing).
The CAD Program at KCC also offers students the opportunity to work with a rapid prototype (3D printing) machine, which allows students to create physical three-dimensional models made of plastic.
“We are on the cutting edge of teaching two- and three-dimensional drafting,” Mann said, adding that the College was one of the first schools in the state to abandon manual drafting to move exclusively into CAD.
“We were doing 2D and 3D drawing and 3D printing when some community colleges around this state were still debating getting away from the manual drawing boards,” he said. “We realize where the future is and we are on that path.”
Jobs waiting
Assisting the College in moving forward is the Computer-Aided Drafting Advisory Committee, a group of community partners from area companies that helps drive the CAD Program forward.
The program’s adoption of SolidWorks, for instance, was a direct result of community partners asking the College to implement the software because its mastery was a skill they would be looking for in future employees.
CAD students looking to become employees have a number of different options for getting there. In addition to the students looking to become basic draftsmen or draftswomen upon their graduation from KCC, Mann said the program also sees a number of pre-engineering students, pre-architecture students, and even students looking to become game designers.
Collaborative transfer relationships with four-year institutions like Western Michigan University – which partners with KCC on a dual-enrollment engineering degree program – and Ferris State University – which offers a Product Design Engineering Technology bachelor’s degree program that accepts KCC’s CAD program in its entirety for transfer students – make things easy for students to pursue further education.
But regardless of whether CAD students choose to move on to a four-year school or into the workforce, Mann said the jobs are there.
“I know right now there are jobs waiting and wanting because there aren’t enough graduates to fill those jobs,” he said. “Our CAD students get jobs, and they’re good jobs.”
KCC offers an Associate in Applied Science degree in Computer-Aided Drafting and Design Technology. For more information about the CAD Program at KCC, visit kellogg.edu/cad.