My Academic Plans (MAPs) are designed by faculty to better guide you in retention and completion. It is highly encouraged that you complete courses in the recommended order provided below in the notes section. You should work with an academic advisor to adjust your plan based on your scheduling needs.
My Academic Plan
Career Opportunities
A manufacturing technician applies knowledge of electro-mechanical systems and devices used in the manufacturing or energy industries. Examples of such devices are: electric motors and associated controls, solenoids and relays, electrical generators, pumps, robotic systems, and electrical transformers.
This career is part of the Manufacturing cluster: Maintenance, Installation and Repair, Manufacturing Production, Production/Process Technology, and Quality Assurance pathways; and the Agriculture, Natural Resources, & Energy cluster: Power, Structural, and Technical Systems pathway.
A person in this career path:
* Installs, modifies, calibrates, repairs and maintains electro-mechanical equipment, such as electric generators, electric motors, and associated control systems
* Designs, installs, programs and maintains industrial control systems, including sensors, actuators, and Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs)
* Repairs electrical and electronic equipment
* Installs, modifies and maintains solar electric generating systems (photovoltaic)
* Installs, maintains and operates fluid power systems (pneumatic and hydraulic)
Specialty and Similar Careers:
Manufacturing Technician: Careers that are more detailed or close to this career:
* Industrial maintenance technician – Applies electro-mechanical skills in the installation, calibration, and repair of industrial equipment.
* Process Technician – Process technicians help design, control, operate and troubleshoot specialized processes that monitor and control pressure, temperature, flow rate, and other process variables in the manufacturing process. Typical industries include pharmaceutical, food processing, energy production, and brewing, and semiconductor manufacturing.
* Field Service Technician – Field service technicians install, repair, and modify equipment at customer locations, rather than in a central manufacturing location.
* Quality Assurance Technician – QA technicians review products, services, and manufacturing processes to ensure compliance with standards of quality.
* Electrical/Electronic Technician – Electronics technicians help design, develop, test, manufacture, install, and repair electrical and electronic equipment such as communication equipment, medical monitoring devices, navigational equipment, and computers. They may be employed in product evaluation and testing, using measuring and diagnostic devices to adjust, test, and repair equipment.
* Utility Engineering Technician – Utility engineering technicians install and maintain power and communication distribution systems, including transformers, repeaters, wireless communications, and their controls.
Learn more about gainful employment
First Semester
Courses should be completed in the order listed below. If you are unable to complete the entire semester list, complete as many courses in this sequence as your schedule allows. If the student cannot take all of the First Semester courses, they should take the recommended math course, otherwise they will not be able to complete the program in 2 years.
MTE 105 | Safety for Manufacturing Environments | 1 |
MTE 106 | Print Reading for Manufacturing | 3 |
MTE 130 | Metrology | 3 |
MAT- GEN | Mathematics:___________ | 3-5 |
GEN- SCI | Natural & Physical Sciences: ___________ | 4-5 |
Total Credit Hours: | 14-17 |
Second Semester
Courses should be completed in the order listed below. If you are unable to complete the entire semester list, complete as many courses in this sequence as your schedule allows.
Third Semester
Courses should be completed in the order listed below. If you are unable to complete the entire semester list, complete as many courses in this sequence as your schedule allows.
ELT 107 | Fundamentals of Industrial Electronics | 3 |
ELT 147 | Digital Devices I | 4 |
PPT 105 | Basic Plant Operation | 2 |
PPT 116 | Instrumentation and Control | 3 |
ELC- LST | Approved Elective List: __________ | 3 |
INT- CAP | MTE 289 or MTE 280:___________ | 1 |
Total Credit Hours: | 16 |
Fourth Semester
Courses should be completed in the order listed below. If you are unable to complete the entire semester list, complete as many courses in this sequence as your schedule allows.
ELT 205 | Electronic Troubleshooting I | 3 |
ELT 258 | Programmable Logic Controllers | 3 |
MTE 135 | Lean Six Sigma | 4 |
ENY 122 | Wind Energy and Photovoltaics | 3 |
MTE 238 | Industrial Fluid Power & Controls | 3 |
INT- CAP | MTE 289 or MTE 280:___________ | 1 |
Total Credit Hours: | 17 |