By Janice  Phelan,
                                                									April 25, 2024
                                             
                                                
                                                
                                                
                                                Owen Douglas Smith, a senior in the Missouri Innovation Campus (MIC) program, was
                                                   recently recognized as the University of Central Missouri’s Outstanding Design and
                                                   Drafting Technology Student for 2023-24. A 2022 graduate of Lee’s Summit West High
                                                   School, Smith will also receive his bachelor’s degree in Design and Drafting this
                                                   May.
The 19-year-old college senior said the Missouri Innovation Campus program saved him
                                                   both time and money.
“I graduated with a bachelor’s degree two years earlier than any of my friends,” he
                                                   said, “and I also have a full-time position lined up directly after graduation.”
Through the Missouri Innovation Campus program, a partnership involving UCM, the Lee’s
                                                   Summit R-7 School District, Metropolitan Community College (MCC), and approximately
                                                   70 metro-area businesses, students enter the program the summer before their junior
                                                   year in high school when they begin taking classes at Lee’s Summit R-7’s Summit Technology
                                                   Academy. Throughout their final two high school years, MIC program participants take
                                                   college-level classes from both UCM and MCC, allowing them to earn their UCM bachelor’s
                                                   degree just two years after high school graduation.
In addition to the accelerated college degree pathway, the MIC program has earned
                                                   national recognition for reshaping the way students experience education. Another
                                                   unique aspect of the program is its three-year, year-round, paid internships, designed
                                                   to connect students to industry-leading businesses.
Smith has served as an intern at Olsson for nearly three years, working in the general
                                                   civil team’s drafting department. Thanks to this internship, his skills in programs
                                                   such as Civil 3D and Bluebeam Revu have greatly improved, he added.
As with a majority of the MIC program interns, Smith has been hired by the company
                                                   where he served his internship. He will begin his new job as an assistant technician
                                                   at Olsson in June.
“I’ve made good friends with many of my co-workers, and we usually go out to lunch
                                                   or play a card game together at least once a week,” Smith said. 
“Owen was one of our first hires as Olsson began working with the MIC program back
                                                   in March of 2021,” said Jason Newland, Olsson's design manager, adding that Owen’s
                                                   growth as a person, in his career, and his understanding of the industry as a member
                                                   of the company’s team has been exceptional.
“People he works with regularly would forget that he was still an intern, saying they
                                                   just thought of Owen as part of the team,” Newland added.
                                                
                                                
The UCM senior said he selected the MIC program due to its many benefits and the number
                                                   of fields offered. 
                                                
                                                “Practically all of my degree-related courses were actually helpful in my job,” Smith
                                                   said.
                                                
                                                For more information about the Missouri Innovation Campus program, visit this webpage.