Skip to Main Content
Menu
Roane State Community CollegeRoane State Community College

Roane State Community College

News
  1. RSCC HomeRSCC Home
  2. About Roane State
  3. Public Relations
  4. News
Move Forward. Don't delay your future! Apply now! Register for online or traditional classes.Move Forward. Don't delay your future! Apply now!. Register for online or traditional classes.
Tennessee Reconnect and Promise. Graduating high school seniors can attend tuition-free. Free tuition for adults.Tennessee Reconnect and Promise. Graduating high school seniors can attend tuition-free. Free tuition for adults.
Online degrees available. Choose from seven completely online programs.Online degrees available. Choose from seven completely online programs.

News: Roane State healthcare job fair matches employers with students

Covenant Health employees Nelson Leiser and Liz Floyd talk with Roane State students on the verge of graduating in healthcare fields during the annual Healthcare Job Fair, held March 29 at the college’s Oak Ridge campus.

March 30, 2017

By Bob Fowler
Roane State staff writer

When it comes to the burgeoning healthcare field, there are plenty of jobs out there.

That became obvious to some 200 Roane State students on the verge of graduating who took advantage of the college’s annual Healthcare Job Fair, held March 29 at the Roane State campus in Oak Ridge.

“There are a lot of potential job openings,” said Trista Murrell, set to graduate from the college’s physical therapist assistant program in August. She was handing out resumes to prospective employers and, she said, “everyone has been very helpful.”

Some 50 companies and institutions set up displays in the atrium and hallways of the college’s Coffey-McNally Building.

Employers included hospitals, medical clinics, nursing homes, healthcare recruiting firms and companies involved in medical record-keeping. Even representatives of the Army and the state’s prison system had displays. Prison nurses start out at $26.50 an hour, a spokeswoman said.

There’s always a need for nurses in the Covenant Health network, said social media recruiter Liz Floyd. Covenant operates 10 medical centers in the region and is East Tennessee’s largest healthcare system, she said. “We’re absolutely looking for new Roane State grads, especially RNs,” she said.

One Roane State student about to graduate in May, Cassidy Harvey, said she’s already landed a job at Blount Memorial Hospital’s radiology department but was at the job fair studying other options.

“It was a lot of hard work,” she said of her Roane State studies, “but it’s been worth it.”

Kim Harris, director of Workforce Training and Placement at Roane State, has organized the job fair for years. No other educational institution in the area offers a similar event, she said, and local healthcare employers “know about it and look for it.”

The job fair was a homecoming of sorts for one healthcare employee. Cynthia Plemens, development coordinator for the Michael Dunn Center, graduated from Roane State 18 months ago at age 50.

Entering the college at her age was very intimidating, she admitted. She said she was quickly welcomed and “really embraced” by the faculty and staff.

“I really thrived here,” she said of Roane State. “Had I not gone to Roane State and obtained a degree, I would not be in the position I’m in now.”

The Michael Dunn Center provides a variety of services to hundreds of clients with developmental disabilities, and job categories there range from nursing to physical therapy.​

For more information about Roane State job placement, contact Kim Harris at (865) 882-4695 or at harriskb@roanestate.edu.

Connect with us

Twitter / XFacebookInstagramThreadsYoutube
© Roane State Community College

Roane State Community College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, creed, ethnicity or national origin, sex, disability, age, status as protected veteran or any other class protected by Federal or State laws and regulation and by Tennessee board of Regents policies with respect to employment, programs, and activities.​​​​​​​ View full non-discrimination policy.

Tennessee's Community Colleges

Report Fraud, Waste and Abuse

Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998