Here is an overview of the program, including its ranking, popularity, student demographics, and graduate outcomes. See how ECTC stacks up against peers offering heavy equipment maintenance.
Jump to any of the following sections:
ECTC reports the heavy equipment maintenance program; completion counts are not currently reported.
Heavy Equipment Maintenance students who finish a bachelor’s at ECTC go on to jobs where they make a median salary of $70,340 a year. This is above $46,932, the median for all majors at ECTC.
To complete a bachelor’s at ECTC, heavy equipment maintenance graduates take on a median debt of $9,900 in student loans. This is lower than $11,539, the typical median for all majors at ECTC.
Information about average full-time undergraduate tuition and fees is shown in the table below.
| In State | Out of State | |
|---|---|---|
| Tuition | $4,296 | $6,240 |
| Fees | $192 | $192 |
Learn more about ECTC tuition and fees.
Among recent graduates, 94% of heavy equipment maintenance associate’s degrees went to men and 6% went to women.
The majority of heavy equipment maintenance associate’s degree graduates at ECTC are White. Roughly 92% of graduates fell into this category.
The following table and chart show the ethnic background for students who recently graduated from Elizabethtown Community and Technical College with a associate’s in heavy equipment maintenance.
| Ethnic Background | Number of Students |
|---|---|
| Asian | 0 |
| Black or African American | 1 |
| Hispanic or Latino | 0 |
| White | 33 |
| Non-Resident Aliens | 0 |
| Other Races | 2 |
Review the following statistics on the composition of the heavy equipment maintenance majors at Elizabethtown Community and Technical College.
This heavy equipment maintenance program at ECTC breaks down into the following more specific areas of study:
| Concentration | Annual Graduates |
|---|---|
| Industrial Mechanics and Maintenance Technology/Technician | 283 |
ECTC conferred 283 completions in industrial mechanics and maintenance technology/technician recently — 6% to women and 94% to men. The largest share of these graduates were White (85%).
More about our data sources and methodologies.