Select Page

HINJ honors NJ Council of County Vocational-Technical Schools with STEM Education Award

September 18, 2020

Judy Savage accepts award from HealthCare Institute of New Jersey

Judy Savage, executive director of the New Jersey Council of County Vocational-Technical School, accepted an award from the Health Care Institute of New Jersey.

The HealthCare Institute of New Jersey (HINJ) recognized the New Jersey Council of County Vocational-Technical Schools with its HINJ Excellence in STEM Education Award at the council’s September board meeting.

HINJ honored the Council and its members for their leadership in STEM education, bolstering New Jersey’s innovation ecosystem, and guiding students on their career path.

HINJ President and Chief Executive Officer Dean J. Paranicas noted that STEM education is important to HINJ, whose members include many of the world’s leading research-based biopharmaceutical and medical technology companies.

“HINJ members work every day to discover and bring to market cutting-edge science to treat and cure diseases like COVID-19,” Paranicas said. “This is not possible without having a talented workforce, which in many cases starts with our county vocational-technical schools introducing students to careers in the life sciences.”

In presenting the award, HINJ Board of Trustees Chair Jack Cox, senior director of market access strategy at Novo Nordisk Inc., said, “New Jersey has long been known as the ‘medicine chest of the world’ for our world-renowned cluster of life science companies.

“To sustain our global standing, they require a steady pipeline of STEM-trained workers to research, develop and manufacture new medicines and medical devices to cure disease and improve the quality of life for patients.”

“Our state’s life sciences industry depends on educational institutions like our county vocational- technical schools to introduce and set students on the path to careers in the life sciences,” Cox added.

In accepting the award, Morris County Vocational School District Superintendent Scott Moffitt, president of the Council, said, “We are grateful for the recognition of the HealthCare Institute of New Jersey, which represents one of our state’s most prominent and respected STEM industries. Thank you for this award, and for being such a strong and committed partner of county vocational-technical schools and a champion of STEM education in our state.”

Judy Savage, Executive Director of the Council, added that being recognized with the HINJ STEM Award is “a great honor for all of our schools,” noting that business partners, such as HINJ and its member companies, “are vitally important to our schools. The relationship with county vocational-technical schools is also critical for employers in all industries whose success depends on a highly skilled workforce.”

Career and technical education is in high demand, and New Jersey’s 21 county vocational-technical school districts experienced a 41 percent increase in enrollment since 2000, with more than 35,000 high school students enrolled in state-approved career and technical education programs, Savage said. Health sciences is the top career program with over 4,600 students enrolled, followed by other STEM programs in engineering, agriculture and life sciences, and computer science and information technology.

Featured News

Camden Student, in the U.S. for just nine years, gets full ride to MIT (TAPinto Camden)

Camden Student, in the U.S. for just nine years, gets full ride to MIT (TAPinto Camden)

When 17-year-old Eric Mora Jimenez arrived in the United States in 2016 from his native Dominican Republic, he spoke little English and enrolled in a fourth-grade ESL course in the Camden City School District. Jimenez, who still lives in the city, will graduate in June with a 4.0 grade-point average at the Gloucester Township campus of Camden County Technical Schools and pick up an associate’s degree he earned at Camden County College while in high school.

High Technology High School Student Turns Research Project into International Organization

High Technology High School Student Turns Research Project into International Organization

Ishani Singh, a senior at High Technology High School, has been a little busy running an international non-profit organization, being interviewed by Good Morning America, and traveling to a conference in the United Arab Emirates. Singh, a resident of Holmdel, N.J., is the founder and lead instructor for Girls Rule AI, which empowers girls from around the world with the tools to build solutions using artificial intelligence (AI).

Baking Dreams: Pennsauken Technical School Adds Pastry and Bakery Area (The Sun Newspapers)

Baking Dreams: Pennsauken Technical School Adds Pastry and Bakery Area (The Sun Newspapers)

Students and staff at Camden County Technical School in Pennsauken, aka “Penn Tech,” celebrated the grand opening of the new culinary and baking wing at their campus last month. The school’s $7.6 million expansion was funded through the Securing Our Children’s Future Bond Act and developed an area exclusively for baking and pastry arts in the main building’s first and second floors.

The owner of this website has made a commitment to accessibility and inclusion, please report any problems that you encounter using the contact form on this website. This site uses the WP ADA Compliance Check plugin to enhance accessibility.