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				| Recruiting Youth to Manufacturing: Addressing the Aging Workforce in Plastics 
Processing |  |  |  
				| by
				Dianna Brodine |  |  
				| Industry 
				 
				Summer 
				2010 |  |  
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				| The Sloan Center on Aging & Work at Boston College has released a new report 
titled “Talent Pressures and the Aging Workforce: Responsive Action Steps for 
the Manufacturing Sector”. As the Baby Boomer generation ages out of the 
workforce, the manufacturing industry faces challenges beyond simply replacing 
those employees. The Sloan Center report points to concerns about the ability to 
recruit skilled workers to those positions from today’s youth, who may be 
looking for employment opportunities that they believe manufacturing cannot 
provide. 
 Plastics Business spoke with several sources to gain perspective on the 
challenges plastics processors face in influencing the youth of today, including 
Steve Dyer of Dickten Masch Plastics; Erin Hlavin, Meghan Leibold, and James 
Michalenko of Thogus Products Cos.; and Adam Kramschuster, Ph.D., Plastics 
Engineering program at University of Wisconsin-Stout.
 
 Building Interest at the High School Level
 Dickten Masch Plastics is located in Nashotah, Wis., with a second location in 
Ankeny, Iowa. The company has grown exponentially over the last two years and 
has had difficulty filling its open positions with qualified people who are 
willing to work in manufacturing. CEO Steve Dyer is a member of the 
Manufacturing Alliance Council for Waukesha County and his fellow manufacturing 
leaders struggle with the same issue. “It comes down to the perceptions that 
manufacturing is dead, or it’s a fall-back job, or that the job will eventually 
be replaced by a robot or shipped overseas,” explained Dyer. “We need to change 
the perception of manufacturing.”
 
 Dyer and his fellow council members decided that the first step in convincing 
the area’s best and brightest to look at manufacturing as a career was to change 
the preconceived notions of their educators and parents. “This summer, we are 
taking superintendants, principals, and guidance counselors on a charter bus to 
do a ‘parade of factories’,” enthused Dyer. “As we drive to the next facility, 
they’ll receive an overview of the facility and its business segment. They will 
take a factory tour, giving them a real sense for the excitement and vibrancy in 
manufacturing.” The tour also will emphasize the options available for those 
looking to enter manufacturing, with career choices in human resources, quality 
control, maintenance, engineering, and supply chain management.
 
 In addition, Dyer and the Manufacturing Alliance Council are working with the 
local school systems to influence the curriculum. “We will provide a list of 
traits and skills that we’re looking for in an entry level employee. They will 
take that skill set and drive it back into their curriculum,” Dyer said. “We 
also want to put an emphasis on the impact manufacturing has had in our state’s 
history and economy.”
 
 Although the efforts of the Dyer and the Manufacturing Alliance Council are 
geared toward high school students, Dyer believes education could start much 
sooner. “If the Boy Scouts can give a merit badge for videogaming, then they can 
give a badge for manufacturing or lean initiatives,” he said.
 
 At the University of Wisconsin-Stout, the Plastics Engineering program also 
attempts to reach out to students beginning in junior high and extending into 
high school. Each summer, the university hosts students in grades 8 through 11 
for a week-long ‘pre-college’, designed to help students decide on future career 
options. As a part of that week, the plastics engineering department conducts 
presentations on plastics materials and holds demonstrations so students can 
better understand the true state of manufacturing today. UW-Stout’s STEM 
(Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) Department also has its own 
recruiter, and a student chapter of SPE has been started on campus.
 
 Recruiting at the College Level
 The University of Wisconsin-Stout’s plastics engineering program began 
in August of 2008 in an attempt to fill a regional gap in plastics processing 
education. With 25 students currently enrolled in the four-year program, the 
university curriculum includes classes on plastics materials, materials testing 
and characterization, molding processes, and computer simulation.
 
 “The biggest challenge we have,” said Adam Kramschuster, assistant professor and 
program director for UW-Stout’s plastics engineering program, “is getting 
students interested in a program called ‘plastics engineering’. The word 
‘plastics’ sounds cheap, bad for the environment, and dirty… it doesn’t sound 
enticing in the way that computer engineering does.” However, Kramschuster noted 
that once students gain a better understanding of the program, either through a 
campus visit or their first class, the decision to enter the program is easily 
made. “When students see the lab and understand what plastics truly are, it’s 
literally almost a 100 percent enrollment rate.”
 
 Thanks to partners like Arburg, which donated a new all-electric 66 ton 
injection molding machine, and RJG and Priamus, which donated data acquisition 
systems and sensors, the UW-Stout program has the latest technology for its 
students. Local companies Donatelle Plastics and Phillips Plastics also have 
been generous, donating used injection molding machines, molds, and the labor 
necessary to install sensors in the molds. RTP and Sabic both donated materials 
for use in the labs, and Innovative Injection Technologies (owned by former 
UW-Stout graduates) has committed $15,000 each year for scholarships for 
plastics engineering students.
 
 However, the equipment in the lab is no substitution for real world experience. 
UW-Stout’s plastics engineering program requires students to obtain a minimum of 
one summer internship in order to graduate. The program will need additional 
internship opportunities as it continues to grow so that students can receive 
hands-on training.
 
 Thogus Product Cos., in Avon Lake, Ohio, has partnered with Penn State Behrend, 
another university offering plastics engineering education, and often hosts 
plastics processing interns – or co-ops – on-site. “We went to Penn State 
recognizing that we needed to start recruiting engineering students specific to 
plastics molding engineering,” explained Erin Hlavin, human resources director. 
“Penn State Behrend has a department-specific career fair every year, and that 
has helped us find people who may be a good fit for Thogus.”
 
 James Michalenko, Thogus’ program engineering manager, was referred to Thogus 
through the plastics engineering program at Penn State. “Kids coming out of high 
school know they want to be in engineering, but generally they go into 
mechanical engineering. Then they see what plastics engineering has to offer – 
they see the technology they get to work with – and it draws them into 
plastics.”
 
 At Thogus, co-ops work from 40-50 hours a week for a six-month period. They go 
through all of the available shifts, giving them experience in starting a shift 
or closing down a shift. “We want to show them our company from the bottom up, 
from material processing to design and development,” explained Meghan Leibold, 
operations manager. “We have them start with equipment cleaning when they first 
come in and then we teach them about the materials. Next they start learning 
processing, shadowing a veteran from Thogus, and finally, we assign them to a 
processing engineer.”
 
 “Bringing co-ops into Thogus is going to give students the experience they need, 
because not every aspect of plastics engineering can be learned in school,” 
Michalenko said. “It gives us the opportunity to train them in the way we want 
them to work, and it gives them a feel for the industry in general.”
 
 Youth in the Workforce
 Recruiting youth to manufacturing is one challenge. Meeting the expectations in 
terms of workplace environment is another. In addition to discussing the age 
distribution of employees in manufacturing when compared to that in other 
industries and the challenges involved in replacing those older workers, The 
Sloan Center’s report also discusses the work arrangements that younger 
employees may be seeking. These include flexible work schedules, creativity 
within day-to-day tasks, and the ability to engage in decision-making.
 
 Thogus, with an average employee age of 39, understands the expectations younger 
employees have for their work environment. In fact, the Thogus team interviewed 
for this article is comprised of younger employees – Hlavin is 31 and Leibold 
and Michalenko are both 25. “We strive to honor the work/life balance by making 
Thogus a destination, not just a place to work,” said Hlavin. “Our conference 
room has comfy chairs, a Wii gaming system, and a flat screen tv that can be 
used by employees during downtime.” Leibold chimed in, “Thogus recognizes a 
quality of life. If you work hard, you can play hard. We’re willing to make 
manufacturing fun.”
 
 The challenge is in conveying that new vision of manufacturing to those 
beginning to make career choices. Kramshuster emphasized the importance of 
peer-to-peer information. “If we can get the students in college to recruit the 
younger students back in their high schools or hometowns, that’s what builds 
interest. Students talking to other students will have a bigger impact. High 
school and college kids don’t want to hear career advice from 40- to 50-year-old 
manufacturing owners.”
 
 Dyer agreed that recruiting youth requires a different perspective. “We’re going 
to have to get out of our ivory towers and change our own perspectives in order 
to bring manufacturing to a new generation,” he explained. “If they haven’t 
lived this – if they haven’t seen a product go from the back of a napkin to the 
customer’s hands – then we have to help them gain the passion for what we do.”
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