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What is Career Technical Education? Presented by Michelle

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Title: What is Career Technical Education? Presented by Michelle


1
What is Career Technical Education?
Presented by Michelle Oliveira, Education
Programs Consultant
2
California CTE Frameworks Defines CTE as
  • Organized educational activities that provide
    coherent, rigorous content aligned with
    challenging academic standards and relevant
    technical knowledge and skills needed to prepare
    for further education and careers in current or
    emerging professions. CTE provides technical
    skill proficiency, a industry-recognized
    credential, a certificate, or a degree and
    includes competency-based applied learning that
    contributes students academic knowledge,
    higher-order reasoning and problem-solving
    skills, attitudes toward work, general
    employability skills, technical skills,
    occupation-specific skills, and knowledge of all
    aspects of an industry including entrepreneurship.

3
Coherent and Rigorous Content
  • Utilizes the CTE Framework for California Public
    Schools
  • Follows the California Career Technical Education
    Model Curriculum Standards
  • Aligned to the 15 Industry Sectors and 58 Pathways

4
Aligned with Challenging Academic Standards
  • Mathematics
  • Science
  • History/Social Science
  • Visual and Performing Arts
  • English Language Arts (Reading, Writing, etc.)

5
Relevant Technical Knowledge and Skills Needed
  • Validated by industry advisors currently working
    in industry

6
Prepare for Further Education and Careers
  • High School (diploma) Entry Technical Skill
    Level
  • Postsecondary Training Middle Technical
  • Certification, Skill Level
  • AA Degree
  • College or University Advanced Technical
  • Bachelors Degree Skill Level
  • or Higher

7
Current or Emerging Professions
  • Labor Market Data/Analysis

8
CTE State Plan
  • Vision
  • Mission
  • High Quality CTE

9
CTE State Plan Vision
  • Career Technical Education will engage every
    student in high-quality, rigorous, and relevant
    educational pathways and programs, developed in
    partnership with business and industry, promoting
    creativity, innovation, leadership, community
    service, and lifelong learning, and allowing
    students to turn their passions into paychecks
    their dreams into careers.

10
CTE Mission
  • The mission of CTE is to provide industry-linked
    programs and services that enable all individuals
    to reach their career goals in order to achieve
    economic self-sufficiency, compete in the global
    marketplace, and contribute to Californias
    economic prosperity.

11
The 11 Elements of a High Quality CTE System
12
High Quality vs. Non Negotiables
  • If our goal is to operate a High Quality CTE
    System, then can we consider the 11 Elements of a
    High Quality CTE System to be Non- negotiables?

13
If yes, lets take a look at
  • Leadership at All Levels
  • Requires institutional commitment and leadership
    at every level
  • Who are our CTE Champions?

14
High Quality Curriculum and Instruction
  • Offers rigorous integrated technical and academic
    content, focused on careers, delivered through
    applied performance and project based teaching
    strategies, and transferable workplace and career
    management skills.
  • Includes Work-based learning

15
Work-based Learning as Defined in the CTE
Framework
  • Work-based learning Course-linked learning
    experiences that are outside the classroom and
    include and employer or community connection.
    Examples include pre-apprenticeship, job
    shadowing, mentorship, internship, clinical
    experience, work-study, informational interview,
    attendance at trade shows, field experience,
    career-related service learning, or other
    learning experience fundamentally external to the
    classroom.

16
Student Support and Student Leadership Development
  • Ranges from transportation, child care,
    translation services, mentoring, coaching for
    success in highly challenging CTE competitions
    and projects (CTSOs), transitions to new career
    opportunities, outreach, etc.

17
Career Technical Student Organizations (CTSOs)
  • Structured leadership development
  • Competitive career-related events
  • Community service
  • DECA, FBLA, FFA, FHA-HERO, HOSA, and SkillsUSA

18
Industry Partnerships
  • Include business, industry, labor and trade
    organizations who work through advisory
    committees, forums, etc. to inform CTE program
    design, instruction, assessment, and offer
    work-based learning experiences

19
System Alignment and Coherence
  • Pathway development
  • Course sequencing (AB 2448)
  • Programs of Study
  • Articulation

20
Career Pathway
  • A coherent, planned sequence of career technical
    education courses detailing the knowledge and
    technical skills students need to succeed in a
    specific career area.

21
Pathway Development
22
Programs of Study
  • A Program of Study is a multi-year sequence of
    academic and technical courses that provides
    students with a structured progression of
    secondary and post-secondary instruction toward a
    specified career area. By incorporating academic
    and technical content into a logical sequence
    with clear connections and minimal repetition,
    Programs of Study set a clear path of career
    technical coursework from middle school through
    college to a rewarding career.

23
Sample Program of Study
24
Sample Program of Study
25
Learn More about Programs of Study
26
Skilled Faculty and Professional Development
  • Requires Californias faculty to be expert in
    many areas
  • Technical skills in their field
  • Transferable essential workplace skills
  • Academic skills required of practitioners in
    their career area
  • CTE Credential-qualified

27
Evaluation, Accountability, and Continuous
Improvement
  • Evaluation/Accountability are Key
  • any discussion of accountability must focus on
    utilizing, aligning, and expanding upon existing
    systems, and must emphasize program improvement
    along with reporting of compliance-driven data.
  • Data is Key

28
CTE promotion, outreach, and communication
  • In order to ensure continued support for CTE, its
    benefits must be validated and made more widely
    known to students, parents, educators,
    counselors, community members, and policy makers
    based on evidence of its impacts.

29
Current Status of CTE
  • One million secondary students enrolled annually
  • 226,575 adult students enrolled in ROCP and Adult
    Education CTE courses
  • 85 of Career Technical Education students taking
    a sequence of courses graduated HS
  • Enrollments in secondary CTE courses declined 15
    from 1997-98 to 2004-05
  • Highest enrollment areas include Business and
    Administrative Services, Information Technology,
    Health, and Arts, Media Entertainment
  • A-G approved CTE courses Over 10,000

30
CTE course enrollment compared to total high
school enrollment, 1993-2005
31
CTE Funding Over the Years
Local Funds NA
32
Charting a New Course for CTE
33
PAST
FUTURE
One Direction
Two Directions
College
Work
Preparing for College OR Career
Preparing for College AND Career
34
PAST FUTURE
35
Initiatives in CTE
  • Federal Perkins Legislation
  • State Plan for CTE
  • CTE Standards and Framework
  • SB 70 Governors CTE Initiative
  • Partnership Academies
  • Multiple Pathways Report

36
Meeting the Challenge
  • Rigor in Academics and Career Technical Education
    programs
  • Results Employment
  • CTE brings relevance to classroom instruction and
    student success
  • Move from entitlement to investment

37
Michelle OliveiraEducation Programs
ConsultantSecondary, Career, and Adult Learning
Divisionmoliveira_at_cde.ca.gov 916.319.0675FAX
916.323.2597
  • Thank You
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