Heavy Equipment Operation · Florida
Heavy Equipment Operation colleges in Florida
Heavy Equipment Operation program coverage in Florida is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Heavy Equipment Operation trains you to run and maintain earthmoving machines like dozers, excavators, motor graders, and scrapers to dig, grade, and shape construction sites.
We're still verifying Heavy Equipment Operation programs in Florida. Try a broader search at /results?q=Heavy Equipment Operation or browse all colleges in Florida.
What you'll study in a Heavy Equipment Operation program
- Operating crawler dozers, excavators, backhoes, loaders, and scrapers
- Running motor graders to fine-grade roadbeds and surfaces to grade
- Reading site, grading, and excavation plans and following grade stakes
- Cut-and-fill calculations, rough layout, and earthwork sequencing
- Soil types, moisture, and compaction with rollers and plate compactors
- Trenching for utilities, sloping, shoring awareness, and backfill methods
- Rigging loads with hoists, jacks, and slings and signaling spotters
- Daily inspection, lubrication, hydraulic and fluid checks, and basic field maintenance
- Jobsite safety around utilities, trenches, and overhead lines, including OSHA practices
Where a Heavy Equipment Operation degree can lead
- Heavy Equipment Operator
- Construction Equipment Operator
- Excavator Operator
- Bulldozer (Dozer) Operator
- Motor Grader Operator
- Paving and Surfacing Equipment Operator
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 operating engineers and other construction equipment operators median $58,710).
This program teaches you to operate the machines that move earth and shape a site before structures go up. You train on equipment such as crawler dozers, hydraulic excavators, backhoes, motor graders, loaders, and scrapers, learning to dig, ditch, slope, strip, grade, backfill, and excavate to grade stakes and plans. Coursework covers reading site and grading plans, cut-and-fill and rough layout, soil and compaction basics, and rigging with hoists and jacks for loads. You also learn daily maintenance, fluid and hydraulic checks, and ground-safety practices around spotters, utilities, and trenches. Where Carpentry has you frame and finish wood structures with hand and power tools, and Construction Management has you plan and budget a whole project from an office, this program puts you in the cab moving material and setting grade.
Most operators enter through an apprenticeship, a community college or technical certificate, or an operating engineers training program, then build seat time on real machines under experienced operators. Many sites expect OSHA construction safety training, and operating cranes, hoists, or rigging may require credentials such as NCCER or NCCCO certification depending on the equipment and the state. A commercial driver's license is often useful for hauling equipment between jobs. Verify the specific licensing, certification, and apprenticeship requirements with your state and any union or training trust, since rules differ by machine and region. A program builds foundational skills, but pay, seasonal demand, and advancement vary by employer, project type, and the local construction market, and a credential is not a job guarantee.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of operating engineers and other construction equipment operators, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $58,710 and projects employment to grow about 3.6% from 2024 to 2034; a high school diploma or equivalent is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
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