Monroe Community College
LASER-TEC is the Center for Laser and Fiber Optics Education, founded in 2013 by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and headquartered at Indian River State College in Florida. It was created to help meet the goals of educating and sourcing domestic talent in the areas of optics and photonics. As a service to students, recent graduates, and prospective employers, Photonics Spectra runs a profile of one of the LASER-TEC colleges each month.
Employers have relied on Monroe Community College (MCC) since 1963 to educate generations of students
to become optical technicians. Offering stackable
certificate and associate degree programs, MCC is
the only community college awarding an Associate of Applied Science degree in optical systems technology.
Polishing lenses is among the skills students learn in MCC’s Optical Systems Technology associate degree program.
Traditional and computer numeric control (CNC) polishing of lenses are among the skills students learn in MCC’s optical systems technology associate degree program. An MCC student looks through the lens he manufactured.
Since the program’s inception, more than 800 students have earned optics credentials from MCC, preparing them for a wide variety of career paths in the global industries of optics,
photonics, and imaging throughout the U.S. Companies that
have hired students and graduates from MCC’s program include Applied Image, Bausch + Lomb, Corning, Eastman Kodak, IDEX Health & Science, L3Harris Technologies, the Laboratory for Laser Energetics at the University of Rochester, Lockheed Martin, Lumetrics, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Optimax Systems, OptiPro Systems, QED Optics, Rochester Precision Optics, Sydor Optics, Thorlabs, and Vertex Optics.
Programs
Optical Systems Technology Associate of Applied Science (AAS)
MCC’s two-year degree program prepares students for a career in the field of optics. Students take courses that include content in optical fabrication and metrology, photonics, applied optical
mathematics, optical elements and ray optics, wave optics,
optical systems, lasers, and photo science. Students use state-of-the-art optics equipment that prepares them for immediate career placement. The optical systems technology program
provides pathways to rewarding careers in companies that
are critically important to our economic growth and national
defense. Students in the program gain practical skills in
advanced manufacturing areas such as lens assembly, metrology, computer numeric control (CNC) grinding, CNC polishing,
conventional optical fabrication, and diamond turning. The degree is designed for students looking to enter the optics workforce as well as for those currently in the workforce seeking
to advance their skills. Students who wish to continue their education on a four-year pathway can transfer from the AAS
degree to a variety of schools in the region, in New York state,
or other states.
Graduates of the associate degree program will have the skills to:
• Evaluate an optical system using a variety of geometrical optics test procedures.
• Make standard electro-optic measurements and evaluate typical electro-optic
configurations.
• Understand and perform basic and advanced optical manufacturing techniques for today’s precision
optical components.
• Understand and perform basic and advanced metrology techniques for testing optical systems and individual optical components.
Stackable Certificate in Optical Systems Technology
MCC’s optical systems technology certificate program prepares students for a career in the field of optics. Students take courses in optical fabrication and metrology, applied optical mathematics, optical elements and ray optics, and photo science. Students use state-of-the-art optics equipment that prepares them for immediate career placement. The optical systems technology program provides pathways to rewarding careers in companies that are critically important to our economic growth and national defense.
Students in the program gain practical skills in advanced manufacturing areas such as metrology, computer numeric control (CNC) grinding, CNC polishing, conventional optical fabrication, and diamond turning. The certificate is designed for students seeking to quickly enter the optics workforce as well as for those currently in the workforce seeking to advance their skills. All courses in the certificate program count toward the AAS degree in optical systems technology, creating a seamless transition for students interested in continuing their education.
Graduates of MCC’s certificate program will have the skills to:
• Understand and perform the basic and advanced optical manufacturing techniques for today’s precision
optical components.
• Understand and perform the basic and advanced metrology
techniques for testing optical systems and individual
components.
Flexible learning options
MCC now offers three credit-bearing courses in completely remote format using scheduled Zoom lectures and asynchronous online instruction and group discussions. Several other courses are offered in hybrid format with remote or online lectures
and hands-on laboratory activities conducted on campus with day, evening, and Saturday options to better meet the needs of working adults.
Hands-on workforce training and apprenticeship
MCC students benefit from hands-on learning experiences in four laboratories with 7500 sq ft of teaching space and over $3 million of state-of-the-art equipment, including a diamond turning lathe and magnetorheological finishing machine, which are also used for short-term training workshops involving both college students and incumbent workers during the college’s January and summer sessions. MCC is also leading the effort
to expand optics manufacturing “earn and learn” registered
apprenticeships to companies nationwide. Please contact the optics program chair if your company is interested in learning more about MCC’s training or apprenticeship programs.
How to recruit from this college
Campus recruiting visits are welcome. MCC will provide,
free of charge, table exhibit space and a private room for
interviewing interested students. Graduates are available every
December and May. Companies interested in recruiting MCC optics students for internships or employment opportunities should contact the optics program chair.
Contact information
Alexis Vogt, Ph.D., Professor and Chair,
Optical Systems Technology
+1 585-292-2002
optics@monroecc.edu
1000 East Henrietta Road
Rochester, NY 14623
Program website
www.monroecc.edu/go/ost
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