American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Dec. 12, 2013 – The Institute for Veterans and
Military Families at Syracuse University in New York has expanded eligibility
to enroll in its Veterans Career Transition Program to spouses of eligible
veterans and active duty service members.
This allows these spouses access to online courses along
four professional tracks that will help them gain knowledge, skills and
certifications that civilian organizations seek in their employees, all at no
cost, institute officials said.
The deadline for spouses and eligible veterans to register
for courses that begin in January is Dec. 15.
The Veterans Career Transition Program delivers
career-focused online training to transitioning U.S. military members, members
of the Guard and reserves, post 9/11 veterans and now military and eligible
veterans’ spouses. The program is paid for in its entirety by JPMorgan Chase
and Co., so participants don’t incur any costs or use their education benefits
to take part, officials said.
“The Veterans Career Transition Program has helped many
veterans successfully transition into civilian careers – and that’s why we’re
expanding it to military spouses,” said Maureen Casey, managing director of the
JPMorgan Chase & Co. office of military and veterans affairs.
“Our aim is to position military families for post-military
service success,” Casey added. “Through VCTP, veterans and spouses can add to
the valuable skills they already have and gain additional knowledge, skills and
certifications that employers are seeking.”
Program participants select an independent study track or
follow education tracks in Professional Skills, Technology or Human Resources
-- a new course of study that will begin in January.
Mike Haynie, executive director and co-founder of the
Institute for Veterans and Military Families, noted that every service branch
includes people who have worked in human resources, project management and
information technology.
“Where they struggle in the civilian job market is with
professional certifications that military training doesn’t provide,” he said.
“The Veterans Career Transition Program helps veterans and military spouses
meet the requirements to fill growing demand from companies for skilled,
experienced workers.”
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