Skip to main content

NOCoE sets up TSMO fellowship scheme

The US National Operations Center of Excellence (NOCoE) has launched a fellowship programme for transportation systems management and operations (TSMO) professionals.
By David Arminas April 20, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The NOCoE fellowship is designed to help transport officials along their career road (© Toms Auzins | Dreamstime.com)

NOCoE says that the fellowships will provide opportunities for those early in their careers to gain knowledge and skills to support their future long-term growth. 

The programme will help develop short and long-term career goals while building soft skills including interpersonal communications, writing and media interactions. These will go beyond technical analysis and basic presentations, explained Patrick Son, NOCoE managing director.

“Soft skills are constantly in demand for every industry,” he said. 

“This fellowship programme will increase their opportunities to develop those skills, increase their TSMO knowledge and add value to their programmes, departments and the people they serve. All of these things are critical to accomplishing the transportation mission.”
 
The TSMO Fellowship Program is open to any public sector employees including state and local departments of transportation, and metropolitan and regional planning organisations.

Fellowship selections will be made by NOCoE staff and representatives from its three partner organisations, the American Association of State and Highway Transportation Officials, the Institute of Transportation Engineers and ITS America.
 
Successful candidates will work with their supervisor and the programme to establish an individual development plan to ensure their training and developmental experiences align with their current job and overall career goals.

For the fellowship’s first year, NOCoE will take in three to five people and more people will be accommodated as demand and resources increase.

All submissions for the first cohort are due by 1 May.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Colorado DoT locates data-rich environment
    January 14, 2020
    Colorado DoT and Esri have been cooperating to unlock data’s potential. Jason Barnes finds out what that has to do with firing a howitzer at snowy mountains – and exactly why things that happened in the past point the way towards future proofing
  • ITS advancement lays beyond benefit-cost analysis
    May 29, 2013
    Shelley Row, former Director of the US Department of Transportation’s ITS Joint Program Office, gives her views on the way forward for the industry. We, as intelligent transportation system (ITS) proponents and engineers, tend to be overly fixated on benefit-cost data. We want decisions to be made on logical grounds for which benefit-cost calculations are optimal. While benefit-cost data is necessary, it is not always sufficient. We can learn from our history where we see three broad groups of ITS deploymen
  • Multi-modal’s long road into the transportation mainstream
    June 4, 2015
    Andrew Bardin Williams looks at 20 years of multimodal transport in the Sun Belt and beyond and the key requirement for user engagement. Phoenix residents will head to the polls in August to decide whether to implement a three-tenths of a cent sales tax to fund the city’s new multimodal transportation plan. It will be the second transportation-related sales tax hike in the past 15 years yet city officials and advocates expect the resolution to easily pass—despite the strong anti-tax environment that has dom
  • Bhatt nomination has ITS approval
    July 25, 2022
    ITS America, IBTTA, ITE & GHSA welcome Joe Biden's FHWA nomination of Shailen Bhatt