Jason C. Shipman
Williamsport, PA 17701
****@***.***
Personal Objective
To secure a full time position as a welding engineer, effectively applying my knowledge and skills
gained from life and education.
Education
B.S. Welding & Fabrication Engineering (completion May 2013), Graduation GPA: 3.3
Pennsylvania College of Technology, Williamsport, Pennsylvania
H.S. Diploma, West Valley High School (2007), Cottonwood, California
Career Related Skills
Technical Skills: AWS D1.1 certified, 30-hour O.S.H.A. certified; strong background with SMAW,
GTAW, FCAW, GMAW, OAW, and SAW processes; strong Metallurgy background; NDT Training
(XRAY, UT, LP, MP); Deming’s Fourteen Points of Management; Kaizen Concept for Continuous
Improvement; PLC’s; WPS’s; AutoCAD design, CNC programming and design; Proficiency in
Microsoft Office software; and Preventative maintenance programs.
Language & Presentation Skills: Ability to read, analyze, and interpret welding procedure sheets, as
well as general business periodicals, professional journals, other technical procedures, and
governmental regulations; Ability to write WPS’s, technical documents and business correspondence;
Ability to effectively present information and respond to questions from groups of managers, clients,
customers, and the general public.
Reasoning Ability: Ability to define problems, collect data, establish facts, and draw valid conclusions;
ability to interpret a variety of technical instructions in mathematical or diagram form and deal with
several abstract and concrete variables.
Work Experience
MotoMart at Carnegie (2006 – 2009) & (Summer 2012), Tracy, California
Position: Assistant Project Manager. Job Duties: Analyzed and evaluated California Codes &
Procedures, composed an operation plan, facility plan, and interpretive plan submitted to the State of
California, consulted with parts representatives on new/continuing orders, and organized and assigned
tasks for employees
Pennsylvania College of Technology (2010), Williamsport, Pennsylvania
Position: Laborer. Job Duties: Assembled welding machines, stripped out industrial application
electrical wiring, used pallet jacks to move welding equipment into the new shop, painted metal
fixtures, and organizational tasks as assigned.
References
Available upon request