IBM Plugs Big Iron to the College Crowd
Aims to fill IT vacancies as baby boomers retire
Computerworld - IBM is trying to convince growing numbers of young engineers that the mainframe isn't dead yet.
For example, thousands of college students have participated in an IBM-created mainframe training and curriculum program that's aimed at generating interest and building skills in the field as baby boomer IT workers near retirement age.
Since its launch two years ago, more than 130 colleges and universities worldwide have joined the IBM Academic Initiative. Under the program, IBM helps schools develop and share mainframe-related curricula, said Mike Bliss, director of zSeries technical support and marketing at IBM.
Some students say the program is awakening a previously unknown interest in mainframe technology. "I wouldn't have been interested in the mainframe [much] at all if I hadn't been exposed to" the IBM program, said Joshua Smith, a 24-year-old programmer/analyst at The Timken Co., a Canton, Ohio-based bearings manufacturer.
While a senior mathematics major at Canton-based Malone College in 2003, Smith took an assembler programming course offered through the IBM program. The course also contributed to his landing a job at Timken.
Prior to taking the class, said Smith, "my opinion of the mainframe was that it was a dying breed." But during the program, a trusted professor told Smith that mainframes are still very much in use and that employers continue to recruit workers with those skills.
For instance, American Fidelity Assurance Co. still processes roughly 75% of its workload on mainframes, said John Schille, CIO at the Oklahoma City-based company. "We would be interested in supporting university education geared toward training in this environment to supplement staff replacement needs, specifically upcoming retirement issues," Schille said.
Preparing for the Future
Schille isn't alone. Over the past few years, LexisNexis Group, a legal research provider in Dayton, Ohio, has hired a handful of entry-level IT workers with mainframe-related experience, said Allan McLaughlin, senior vice president and chief technology officer. "The potential retirement [of] some of our very specific mainframe talent keeps me up at night," he said.
IBM isn't expecting a mass exodus of mainframe talent, said Bliss. "But we do need to get some younger folks started to build those skills," particularly since it takes a few years for IT workers to embrace the complexity of the environment, he said.
According to Bliss, last October IBM set a goal of putting 20,000 people through the program by the end of 2010.
Earl Rodd, an assistant professor of computer science at Malone College, said that the school got involved in the IBM program in early 2003 because mainframes are a "significant" part of corporate computing. "Our [computer science] program is intentionally broad instead of deep in order to expose people to a lot of things they probably haven't seen before," he added.



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