LARAMIE ā WyoTech is not only growing its campus and student base, its reputation has taken off as well.
Automotive tech grads from the Laramie-based school are coveted like star athletes, to the point that theyāre recruited by companies for jobs all over the country.
That has WyoTech grads making big plans for their futures and heading out to whatever new corners of the world they choose.
Thatās because the job opportunities these graduates get are so plentiful, they can practically push a pin into a map, picking where they want to go, regardless of where it is.
Ethan Arganbright, from Texas,Ā for example, has offers in Texas and Oklahoma, as well as with FedEx. The latter, being an international company, means he could actually choose anywhere in the world he wants to go.Ā
āIām still deciding on exactly which job I want to take, but theyāve all been amazing,ā he told Cowboy State Daily. āBut I have had a few job offers back home, so I am heading back home.ā
Chance Wellborn, from Tennessee, on the other hand, has made up his mind that he will be headed for Sewell Cadillac in the heart of Dallas, Texas,Ā in the next two weeks ā very far from his home.Ā
Heāll spend six months in high-level training at the dealership, which heās been told is among the largest Cadillac dealerships in the nation.
After he completes the class, heāll get an automatic $16 per hour pay bump, bringing him to an overall $35 an hour.
āThe way automotive works there, itās not really a salary,ā he said. āIfĀ Iām taking apart an engine, for example, it might pay 32 hours. If I get it done in 40 hours, I get 32 hours. But if I can get it done in 18 hours, I still get paid 32 hours.ā
Itās an incentive toward efficient work, but also an opportunity to boost his pay.Ā
Wellborn decided to take theĀ jobĀ because of the chance to explore the world at large, with Dallas being a greatĀ base of operations for that.
āI kind of live by the philosophy that when Iām 30, 40, however many years old, I donāt want to look back 10 years and think, āI should have done that,āā he said. āAnd it is kind of scary to move that far away from home, but I feel itās a situation that if I didnāt do it, I would regret it later on.ā
Eventually, he added, thereās always the option to go back home with his skills and open his own business.
āI donāt think youāre a master coming out of (WyoTech),ā he said. āBut I do think it teaches you a lot of the principles and, like, the ideas behind a lot of stuff. It makes it easier to learn stuff.ā
Go Anywhere, Be Anything
Dr. Seuss has an entire book devoted to telling people they can go anywhere in the world and do anything that they want to doĀ
WyoTech has made that real for Derrick Peters, who wanted to find a job in Wyoming.Ā
In two weeks, heāll graduate with a job offer from Jackson Group Peterbilt in Cheyenne.
āThe career fair was a huge help with that,ā Peters said. āThatās such an opportunity for students to broaden their horizons. Thereās more opportunities than just your specific field, and theyāre so vast. All over the country. You can go anywhere.ā
For Danny Warner, his dream is to become a mechanic for Ferrari.
He's been told that would ordinarily requireĀ several years of experience fixing less complex cars at someplace like a Toyota dealership.
But he believes WyoTech has brought him a viable alternative path to that dream, one that will get him there more quickly than heĀ could normally expect.
āI was told by this one, like top mechanic for Ferrari, who was here not too long ago, and he told me to just become like a porter, which is detailing cars and taking them to get gas,ā Warner said. āAnd then to show interest in wanting to work on the cars, and that theyād eventually take me as a mechanic.ā
With the Ferrari mechanicās coaching, Warner has already lined up the recommended job at a Ferrari dealership in Denver. That location is ideal from another standpoint. Warner doesnāt want to travel too far away from his home in Colorado yet.
Part of that is because he has projects at home, like fixing up his grandfatherās Ford, which his grandmother recently gave him.Ā
āIāve been bringing some stuff up here from that truck, to fix it up and then bring it back down to Colorado,ā he said. āIām still having some issues with the carburetor.ā
Warner plans to bring the carburetor back to WyoTech and work on it some more for his last two weeks of school.Ā
Heās excited to get his grandfatherās truck running again, and about what the future holds ā regardless of how things run for him at the Colorado Ferrari.
āIf that doesnāt work for whatever reason at that dealership, I can go to so many other Ferrari dealerships, now that Iām in the door, around the country,ā he said. āThereās some places Iād love to go, like Salt Lake City. I have a lot of friends there, and thereās a Ferrari dealership down there.ā
Take Me To Michigan
Tim Shearer headed to WyoTech with a Michigan-centered life plan already set in stone.
His wifeās family is from Michigan, and so, he already knew he wasĀ locked into moving there to help out his in-laws.
He was prepared to spend a lot of time job hunting to make that happen. But he neednāt have worried.
He graduates in two weeks with a dream job lined up with Stellar Rod and Custom owned by Mike Brimm, who was formerly with GM Motors as an experimental automotive paint technician.
āWyoTech has just been phenomenal,ā Shearer said. āIt allows so many opportunities. Thereās so much you can learn from this school if youāre willing to put the effort in to do so. If you come here with an open mindset to learn, you can learn a lot. I would say thereās easily 1,000 yearsāĀ worth of knowledge from all the instructors here.ā
Eventually, Shearer hopes to grow and expand his own business, SIC Hot Rods, and feels heās already gotten a great start on that, too, thanks to the fact WyoTech allows students to bring in special projects for some classes.
Shearerās special project is a 1946 Ford truck he calls āCowabunga.ā Itās going to be a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle-themed truck, with a grill designed to look like a character from one of the 1990s Ninja Turtles movie, as well as an engine modeled after Shredder.Ā
āIām going to use his helmet for the air filter and put like shoulder spikes on the valve covers in his colors,ā Shearer said. āAnd I might cut out a section of the roof and have it say, like, āSewerā up there on top, because the turtles live in the sewer.ā
The project is something he wonāt finish at WyoTech, but itās something heās confident he can finish one day, thanks to WyoTech.
ItāsĀ just another way the career and technical school hasĀ helped people turn the world into their very own oyster, by giving them the skills and tools to dream big and plant those dreams anywhere in the world they choose.
RenƩe Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.