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Real-world packaging education at WITC

Wisconsin Indianhead Technical College packs a wealth of hands-on machinery experience into its two-year packaging technician program.

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Reading, writing, and packaging machinery: There’s as much hitting the machines as hitting the books at Wisconsin Indianhead Technical College in New Richmond, WI. That’s apparent in a walk-through of an 8,000-sq-ft "lab" area adjacent to the classrooms. Packed with an amazingly diverse range of equipment, the lab is where students take their classroom learning along with their toolkits into the real world of packaging machinery.

It’s this hands-on emphasis that sets the school’s Automated Packaging Systems Technician program apart. Coursework for the two-year program includes Package Machine Rebuilding, Schematics, and Motion Controls.

"We have two lab areas full of about 35 packaging machines, from fill-and-seal cartoners to vertical and horizontal wrappers," says program head Kevin Lipsky, himself a 1979 graduate who joined the WITC faculty in 1986 (see www.packworld.com/view-24282). By 1989, he had helped develop the packaging curriculum into a two-year vocational program. "We use our variety of machines to develop the students’ confidence and provide experience with different products and materials."

Most of the equipment is donated by the industry, according to Lipsky, with the balance comprising equipment that WITC has invested in through procurement and refurbishment.

"Our program is unique to the degree that we have this amount of equipment, that we also focus on materials, students perform operations, and we offer installation classes," says second program instructor Joe Krear, who is also a WITC graduate, class of 1990. After graduation, Krear worked for Nordson where he was involved with installations of its hot-melt applicators. He joined the faculty in 1999.

One example of how students are trained took place in early 2008, when the program added an Amotek bagger donated by Optima Machinery. Students’ learning began on the back of the truck that delivered it. "We brought the machine in, installed it, powered it, and started the process of getting it operational," Krear explains.

WITC is located east of the Twin Cities of Minnesota in an area rich with automation and packaging vendors as well as packagers like General Mills. The school is part of a network of four technical colleges throughout NW Wisconsin. Other campuses are located in the cities of Superior, Rice Lake, and Ashland. Each has its own specialized courses, such as marine repair in Ashland. WITC New Richmond’s packaging program is supported by regional packaging vendors such as Bosch/Doboy, which is located a stone’s throw away, Tetra Pak, Krones, MGS, and also distant companies such as Econocorp.

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