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Its Not your fathers Oldsmobile

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Title: Its Not your fathers Oldsmobile


1
Its Not your fathers Oldsmobile!
  • Tom Welch
  • Director, Seeding Innovation
  • Office for the New Economy
  • tom.welch_at_ky.gov
  • February 19, 2004

2
What will Kentuckys economy need?
  • Need for high-tech/neo-entrepreneur
  • Neo-entrepreneurs
  • Ability to combine highly-trained intellect with
    solutions to problems not yet clearly defined or
    which represent nonparadigmatic problems

3
  • Reengineered identity for young Kentuckians
  • Synthesizes the following
  • Unparalleled academic preparation
  • Entrepreneurial approach
  • Confidence as a fundamental characteristic of the
    identity
  • Understanding of the global nature of their
    tasks

4
Major initiatives of Seeding Innovation
  • Encourage students to prepare to participate in
    areas related to New Economy directions.
  • Mathematics
  • Science
  • Engineering
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Infuse entrepreneurial thinking in the K-16 arena.

5
  • Role Model Program
  • Mentor Program
  • Internships
  • Summer camp for Entrepreneurs
  • Governors Recognition program

6
Its Time To Get With It . . .
It may not be your fathers Oldsmobile . . .
But it sure looks like your grandmothers high s
chool!
7
Manhours for car and credit hour production
1912-2004
8
What do the data reveal?
  • A look at data from the 2000 census reports

9
How does Kentucky stack up?
  • of adults over 25 with less than a 9th grade
    education
  • US average 7.4
  • KY average 11.7

10
Lets get personal (US avg. 7.4)
  • Bourbon 9.3
  • Clark 10.4
  • Marion 15.2
  • Montgomery 14.7
  • Nicholas 16.5
  • Washington 17.1
  • Woodford 7.5

11
of adults 25 with less than a 9th grade
education
  • 110 Kentucky counties below the natl average

12
Kentucky counties that beat the national average
for adults with more than a 9th grade education.
13
  • 18 counties have more than 25 of the adult
    population over 25 with less than a 9th grade
    education
  • Owsley County has 33.8 of the over 25 adult
    population with less than a 9th grade education.

14
of population with a high school diploma or
higher
  • US average 80.7
  • KY average 74.1

15
with HS dip (US avg 80.7)
  • Bourbon 75.4
  • Clark 75
  • Marion 70.5
  • Montgomery 70.5
  • Nicholas 62.9
  • Washington 68.8
  • Woodford 82.6

16
of population with a high school diploma or
higher
  • 111 Kentucky counties below the natl average

17
Kentucky counties that beat the national average
for adults with a high school diploma
18
80.7 of the US adult population has a high
school diploma.
  • 32 Counties have less than 60 of the population
    with a high school diploma.
  • Owsley and Clay counties have less than 50 of
    the adult population with a high school diploma.

19
of adults over 25 with a BA or higher
  • US average 22.8
  • KY average 20.8

20
of adults 25 with a BA or higher (US avg.
22.8)
  • Bourbon 13.5
  • Clark 15.6
  • Marion 9.1
  • Montgomery 13.4
  • Nicholas 7.5
  • Washington 13.3
  • Woodford 25.9

21
of adults 25 with a BA or higher
  • 106 Kentucky counties below the natl average

22
Kentucky counties that beat the national average
for adults with at least a BA.
23
  • 39 Kentucky counties have fewer than 10 of the
    adults over 25 who hold a BA or higher.
  • Edmonson County has a population with only 4.9
    of the adults holding a BA or higher.

24
Where do we rank?
  • 25th in population
  • 34th in patents issued
  • 35th in math proficiency
  • 46th in 8th graders taking Algebra

25
  • 55 Kentucky counties did not have a single
    business classified by the KY Economic
    Development Cabinet as a knowledge-based
    business or industry.

26
(No Transcript)
27
Who wins? Who loses?
  • Counties win and lose in terms of an economic
    base.
  • Each student wins or loses because of the
    preparation and opportunity for learning at high
    levels which we provide or do not provide.

28
  • In the 19th and 20th centuries, geography imposed
    limitations on opportunities for learning.
  • In the 21st century, we cannot afford to accept
    geography as a reason to limit opportunities for
    students to achieve and participate in the
    learning-based economy.

29
  • We are not in the school business.
  • We are in the learning business.
  • How will we broker learning opportunities for
    each students learning portfolio?

30
  • Some thoughts . . .

31
  • Change constant, accelerating, ubiquitous is
    the most striking characteristic of our world.
    . .
  • and our education system has not yet recognized
    this fact.

32
  • Whatever the reasons were for the present form
    of schools, they have little or nothing to do
    with the problems that we face now, and so they
    need to be changed.

33
  • The trouble is that most teachers have the idea
    that they are in the information dissemination
    business.

34
  • Schools as they now exist largely confine
    students to sitting in boxes with the choice of
    acquiescing to teacher demands or getting out.

35
  • A fanatic is someone who redoubles his efforts
    when he has forgotten his aim.

36
  • The only relevance of the curriculum for most
    students is that if they do what they are told,
    there will be a tangible payoff.

37
  • A subject is something you take and when you
    have taken it, you have had it, and if you have
    had it, you are immune and need not take it
    again.

38
  • Arrangements should be worked out with colleges
    and universities to admit students from a school
    system on the basis of performance rather than
    grades in subjects.

39
  • To accomplish renewal, we need to understand
    what prevents it. The aging society develops
    elaborate defenses against new ideas.

40
  • The fact is that our present educational system
    is not viable and is certainly not capable of
    generating enough energy to lead to its own
    revitalization.

41
  • The teachers of the future must bring this
    revolution off or it will not happen.

42
  • The preceding thoughts were from
  • Teaching As A Subversive Activity
  • by
  • Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner
  • c 1969!

43
If we can agree
  • We dont know what will occur if we can agree
  • We DO know what will occur if we dont!

44
  • The problem is NOT that
  • high schools are not
  • getting the job done.

45
High Schools have been very successful at
accomplishing exactly what they were designed to
do.
46
The modern high school was formed to
  • 1. Ensure that any student presenting themselves
    for university level work had at least 125 hours
    of instruction in a set of core subjects.
  • 2. Ensure that students not going to college
    followed a course of study deemed appropriate by
    the adults in charge.

47
  • Are there ways to re-form the system?

48
One idea . . .
Governors School for the Future of the Common
wealth
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