Hands-On Learning At An HVAC Excellence-Accredited School
The nationwide Lincoln Technical Institute has more HVAC Excellence-credentialed instructors than any other school.
The school’s Union, New Jersey and Grand Prairie, Texas campuses have HVAC Excellence accreditation for their HVACR programs. Lincoln Tech and the Lincoln College of Technology have an initiative to accredit all of their programs, said HVAC Excellence’s Weiss.
Ravon Williams, 22, of Staten Island, New York, graduated from the Union campus in April.
“I’ve always felt I was a hands-on person. I always wanted to be in some form of construction,” says Williams, who aims to work in residential or commercial heating and cooling.
In the school’s “green” lab, students learned how to service green energy houses and how to design some of the systems, she says. “It helps us to get hands-on with what we'll realistically be seeing in homes once we get to the field.”
Students are learning in-person at labs limited to 15 people during the pandemic, with the remainder of the curriculum being taught online, says Paul Monck, an instructor at the school for 12 years.
Many instructors at the school are certified master heating ventilation and air conditioning educators, he says — a credential from HVAC Excellence held by about 125 educators.
Students in Monck’s classroom work hands-on with subjects like ductwork fabrication, oil burners, furnaces and thermal imaging cameras.
In the 1970s, Monck attended the school. Years later, he returned to take a test for EPA refrigerant certification, and this led to his move from the field to the classroom.
Naomi Holt, 26, of Plainfield, New Jersey, graduated from Lincoln Tech in December.
Holt’s time at the school “was a great experience,” she says, despite the challenges presented by the pandemic, adding that instructors were patient with students during a year like no other.
“I was going through job searches one day and I saw a couple jobs that popped up in the field. They started at $20 an hour in most places,” she explains of her path to the HVACR program. “I was like, ‘woah, I’m in the wrong field of business right now.’”