Alex Crays wants it to be spring.
The collision program he co-directs with Andrei Cojuhari bought a $45,000 John Bean ADAS calibration system last summer, and he’s ready to start teaching it.
“We didn’t have time last year,” Crays said. After training in December, “we’re about to teach it in May for the first time.”
Crays and Cojuhari lead auto body instruction for Salem-Keizer School District’s Career Technical Education Center in Oregon. They have 97 students — “97 employees,” Crays corrected — and CTEC is like an incubator or accelerator of vocational teaching…