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Candidates complete a series of in-depth interviews to determine their goals. NTC offers an IT infrastructure management program in partnership with Nashville Software School and Volunteer State Community College that is supported by a GIVE grant from the state. Candidates selected for the GO Tech program can gain the skills and industry certification needed for an entry-level IT job free of cost.
Individuals with different goals are referred to other local organizations, such as Nashville Software School, NTC Chief of Staff Sandi Hoff said. Our students come from a wide range of backgrounds, Hoff said. We have really focused on trying to work with partners who can help identify people of color, women and veterans . because those are three groups that are currently underrepresented in technology professions.
Lynn Ragna Moyer Orester passed away at her home in Rock Springs on Friday, September 11, 2020.
Lynn was born in Pendleton, Oregon to John and Hazel Williamson Moyer on October 10, 1944. She was the youngest of three children, although her brother Michael passed in infancy.
Her family traveled around the western US, following her father’s jobs for J. A. Tertelling & Sons Construction. A particular job brought the family and their mobile home to Hanna, where John Moyer was a coal mine foreman, and later mine superintendent.
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They lived there for almost four years before moving to Casper. A job back in Washington made her dad realize how much he (they) loved Wyoming and he wanted his own business – even “just” a peanut stand.
Overwhelmingly, we hear from our communities that housing and economic inequality are the priority, Stand Up Nashville said in a statement. What is clear from the responses is that we don t know how many jobs will be filled by Nashville residents.
For its part, Oracle is working to diversify its workforce by working with a recruiting organization to hire more Black and Hispanic employees and more women after an internal review showed its employee pool to be overwhelmingly white and male.
Placing more Nashvillians in tech roles
The first two prongs of NTC s tech workforce growth plan are local. Programs introducing tech careers at the middle school and high school level are longer-term investments. NTC also partners with Nashville Software School to connect people to boot camps geared toward adults who want a career change.