Canberra Uni's mainframe scholarships off to a crunchy start

Founders inducted as IBM Z champions.

By Matt Johnston <https://www.itnews.com.au/author/matt-johnston-1224521>   Mar 
21 2019  11:51AM
https://www.itnews.com.au/news/canberra-unis-mainframe-scholarships-off-to-a-crunchy-start-522758


“If mainframes stopped working, the world as we know it would also cease to 
function.”

That’s the takeaway from Elina Woolley, a trainee at the University of 
Canberra’s tuition-free course delivering mainframe skills to the next 
generation of aspiring computer professionals.

The three-year program, delivered with education partner Column 72, exposes 
trainees to the technical and programming aspects of IBM Z (nee zSeries, nee 
System 360).

When the revival of the Mainframe Trainee Program (MTP) was announced in July 
last year, federal government agencies and banks breathed big sighs of relief 
at the prospect of a bigger talent pool to keep the machines that refuse to die 
running.

Although students only began the MTP in December, Column 72 directors Paul 
Matthews and Murray Woods were recognised for the initiative by being named on 
the IBM Champions 2019 list, a select group of 40 international promoters of 
IBM Z.

One of the employers working with students undertaking the program is the 
Northern Territory’s Department of Corporate and Information Systems (DCIS).

Senior director of Data Centre Services, Scott Thomson, said MTP is crucial to 
bringing “fresh blood and new ideas” into the field, which are “always 
beneficial to any organisation, and are crucial to driving the industry”.

“Mainframes have been around for over 50 years, and they’re only going to be 
increasingly used.”

That’s backed up by IBM’s earnings reports, where it was revealed mainframe 
sales doubled in the quarter to July last year, part of a continued upward 
trend.

“So it is vital that we grow our specialised mainframe skills resources, 
especially internally,” Thomson said.

“We are better able to build relationships with them – the work force in our 
industry is very mobile nowadays, so this is particularly important in terms of 
retention.”

Aiding retention is the promise of a job with an “attractive” salary to MTP 
members once they graduate with a Bachelor of Information and Mainframe 
Technology.

Woolley added that that the more she’s learnt about mainframes, the more she 
realised they underpin vital aspects of everyday life.

For instance, some of the federal government’s biggest IBM mainframe users 
include Centrelink, Medicare, Home Affairs, Defence and the Australian Taxation 
Office which often need to obtain security clearances for computing staff 
working on their systems.

Outside of the public sector, banks like Westpac have stuck with IBM through 
various ups and downs over the year.

When the revived MTP was announced in July, it was understood Human Services 
and Westpac would be two of the initial destinations for the mainframe grads.
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