Arkansas Online

Technical school’s tuition going up

Board at Northwest in Springdale approves 10% jump for 2021-22 school year

MARY JORDAN

SPRINGDALE — Northwest Technical Institute is raising tuition 10% for the 2021-22 school year.

The board of directors Thursday voted 3-0 in support of the increase. Board members Anthony Doss and Kelly Johnson were absent.

The increase will bump tuition from $60 to $66 per credit hour, said Melissa Greenslade, student service director. The increase is necessary because of rising operational costs for almost all services and supplies, she said.

The institute implemented a $5 increase per credit hour last school year. That increase was the school’s first in five years, Greenslade said.

The tuition increase comes as the institute is seeking to grow its enrollment by hundreds of students. The school historically has had an enrollment of 1,200 to 1,300 annually, but administrators said they hope to increase enrollment to as much as 2,000 this fall.

New program offerings for business, construction and commercial driver training may help fuel the increase, said Jim Rollins, institute president.

The construction program will begin Aug. 23, said Robin Eason, vice president of instruction. It will serve 50 students the first year and provide participants with internationally recognized National Center for Construction Education and Research certification, said Michael Dewberry, apprenticeship director.

The 16-week program will focus mainly on residential construction and will cover topics such as carpentry, masonry, concrete finishing, electrical work and plumbing. It will cost about $1,800 to complete, Eason said.

The school likewise will offer a new business track for people looking to get into the business field or seeking professional development opportunities, she said. Costs for completing the program are still being developed, Eason said. Classes begin Sept. 2.

Classes will vary from three weeks to three months and will focus on topics such as human resources, accounting and office management.

As many as 60 students will have an opportunity to participate in the program its first year, Eason said.

The program will offer industry-recognized certifications, to include the Excel spreadsheet program, according to Greenslade.

“We are still working on some of the certifications now, but we know that industry is looking for workers in payroll, medical office assistants and Excel gurus,” Eason said.

The institute will also offer a commercial driver’s license training program for 200 students annually beginning Sept. 15, Eason said. Ten cohorts of 20 students will have an opportunity to participate in the four-week training sessions annually.

Students who successfully complete the training and drivers test will receive a commercial driver’s license allowing them to drive professionally across the country, Dewberry said. This is the first time the institute has offered its own commercial driver’s license training since the 1980s; Mid-America Truck Driving School is currently offering the training and will end instruction at the institute the first week of September, Dewberry said.

“We are wanting to provide a broader and more comprehensive training program of study to meet the need of the regional trucking industry,” he said of why the institute will be conducting the training in the future.

Additional increases in enrollment will result from continued emphasis on the institute’s current offerings, he said.

The institute is a state-supported school featuring several programs for high school students and adults, including welding, industrial maintenance, diesel technology, nursing and information technology.

Arkansas

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2021-07-23T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-23T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://edition.arkansasonline.com/article/282024740286483

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