Schools
Goodwin College Gets Manufacturing Scholarship Award
The donation from the Haas Foundation was announced this week.

EAST HARTFORD, CT — Goodwin College has been awarded a $15,000 grant for scholarship support by the Haas Foundation, college officials said Thursday.
Representatives of the California-based foundation met with the faculty and staff members for a check presentation earlier this month at the Goodwin College Business and Manufacturing Center.
One of the main goals of the Haas Foundation is to introduce students to careers in machine technology and manufacturing by sponsoring educational events, programs, and competitions that provide these opportunities. The Foundation also offers scholarships to programs that help build skills within the machining industry.
Gene Haas, owner of Haas Automation, Inc., a leading builder of CNC machine tools, created the foundation in 1999 to support manufacturing education in the form of scholarships for CNC machinist training, Goodwin officials said.
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Kathy Looman, foundation administrator for Haas, referenced a recent report that illustrates the importance of the Foundation's work.
"The Skills Gap in U.S. Manufacturing 2015 and Beyond" projects that, "Over the next decade, nearly three and a half million manufacturing jobs will likely need to be filled, and the skills gap is expected to result in two million of those jobs going unfilled."
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To date, more than 1,500 charitable organizations and schools have received funds totaling more than $40 million from the foundation.
Lorraine Palmer of Trident Machine Tools, a Haas distributorship in Windsor, became familiar with the Goodwin program and connected the manufacturing faculty with Bob Skodzinsky, manager of the Haas Technical Education Center Program. Skodzinsky suggested the College apply for support. Len Walsh, Goodwin's Program Director for CNC Machining and Supply Chain & Logistics Management, and Marion Leonard, director of grants and planned giving, worked on the application and later received notification of the award.
In distributing the $15,000 of scholarship support, Goodwin is allowed a generous amount of flexibility in identifying the student recipients, school officials said.
Guidelines are currently being established by the Business, Management, and Advanced Manufacturing Department, which comprises the CNC and other manufacturing and business programs. The scholarships will be awarded for the college's 2017 spring and summer semesters.
In discussing the benefits of the grant, Walsh stated, "Scholarships like this inspire academic achievement in our CNC students and are an effective means of promoting our program. The Haas Foundation's generous gift is truly a momentous opportunity for Goodwin College students."
Photo Credit: Goodwin College
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