Title: Integrating Careers into Curriculum
1- Integrating Careers into Curriculum
- Dawn Hudson
- Paulding County Schools
- Science Specialist/National Board Facilitator
- dhudson_at_paulding.k12.ga.us
- 770-443-8003 x 10184
2Integrating Careers Into Curriculum
- Where do you begin?
- Map out your current curriculum and plan to
integrate careers where they naturally fit - Consider adding a career day one day a year or
once a semester specific to your subject area - Make it real by finding tables of youth
employment through the Internet - Make it even more real by having students do
budgets based on careers they choose - Have students create a portfolio or build a
resume as they go through school
http//www.myfuture.com/toolbox/createresume_all.h
tml - Consider teaming up with other teachers in your
school to do common units which have career themes
3Top 10 industries of longest-held employee job
of youths while aged 15 in1995-97, by sex
- Males
- Eating and drinking places .......................
...............................................
27.3 - Construction .....................................
..................................................
..... 8.3 - Miscellaneous entertainment and recreation
services ............................ 7.6 - Grocery stores ...................................
..................................................
... 4.7 - Newspaper publishing and printing
..................................................
....... 4.2 - Landscape and horticultural services
..................................................
.... 4.0 - Agricultural production, crops ...................
..............................................
2.6 - Agricultural production, livestock
..................................................
.......... 2.5 - Automotive repair and related services
..................................................
. 2.0 - Miscellaneous retail stores ......................
...............................................
1.5
- Females
- Eating and drinking places .......................
...............................................
30.8 - Miscellaneous entertainment and recreation
services ............................ 10.9 - Grocery stores ...................................
..................................................
... 4.2 - Private households (personal services)
..................................................
3.0 - Religious organizations ..........................
.................................................
2.3 - Child day care services ..........................
.................................................
2.3 - Services to dwellings and other buildings
...............................................
1.7 - Apparel and accessory stores, except shoe
............................................ 1.6 - Food stores, not elsewhere classified
..................................................
... 1.5 - Hotels and motels ................................
..................................................
. 1.4 - The National Longitudinal Survey of
- Youth 1997
4Advisory activities should NOT be
- Homeroom
- Homework
- Study hall
- Replacement for counseling
- Sustained silent reading
- A scheduling process
5Paulding High School Advisement
- Advisement Program
- In the high school setting, students will
encounter a series of advisement lessons in their
assigned homeroom. Advisement teachers will
present advisement topics based upon the
following schedule. - August 9, 2005
- Schedule Verification and Review of Student
Handbook - August 10, 2005
- Review of Student Handbook
- August 11, 2005
- Success in the classroom (opens as word file)
- August 25, 2005
- Diploma Options (opens as word file)
- September 8, 2005
- Virtue (HHS-Character 1st Lesson will be placed
in teacher's box) - September 21, 2005
- Study Skills (Friday, September 23-Note date
change!) - October 13, 2005
- Patience
- October 27, 2005
- Academic Intervention
- November 17, 2005
- Responsibility
- December 8, 2005
- Respect
- January 12, 2006
- Initiative
- January 26, 2006
- Diploma Requirements
- February 9, 2006
- Self-Control
- March 9, 2006
- Punctuality
- March 16, 2006
- Test-Taking Skills
- April 13, 2006
- Creativity
- April 20, 2006
- HOPE Scholarship
- May 11, 2006
6Suggestions to make it WORK!!!!
- CANCEL Advisement ONLY IF THE BUILDING IS BURNING
DOWN!!!! - Administration MUST be on board
- Create an advisory team
- Make it REAL!! This is neither a study hall,
just silent reading, nor homeroom - Vary the activities art, music, videos,
stories, group work, etc. - Create small groups
- Assign roles and responsibilities
- Be flexible! Listen to the students.
7Math Career Matching
- Directions Match the careers with the salaries
by placing a letter from the Salaries column in
the blanks beside the careers. - Careers
Salaries - 1. Biological scientists _____
a. 41,080 - 2. Chemists ____
b. 44,180 - 3. Computer systems analysts _____
c. 46,330 - 4. Geologists, geophysicists, oceanographers
_____ d. 49,239 - 5. Mathematicians _____
e. 50,080 - 6. Mathematics professor _____
f. 59,330 - 7. Physicists and astronomers _____
g. 67,020 - 8. Aircraft pilots and flight engineers _____
h. 68,640 - 9. Financial managers _____
i. 82,310 - 10. Insurance claims and policy processing clerks
_____ j. 110,940 - Source for salaries Bureau of Labor
Statistics, median annual earnings in 2000.
8Answers to Math Careers Salaries
9Are we discovering dreams, desires and meeting
needs?
- 16 of Georgia's 18 public four-year colleges and
universities graduate fewer than half of their
students after six years. Six of the schools
graduate fewer than a quarter of their students,
research by the Education Trust, a Washington
nonprofit advocacy group for students in K-12 and
postsecondary schools - 463,269 students (9-12) dropped out of school
(2003-2004)-Governors Office of Student
Achievement - 4 out of 10 graduates say they have been
inadequately prepared to enter college or hold
down a job- Stateline.org - No state requires its graduates to take the
courses that reflect the real-world demands of
work and postsecondary education-Achieve
10Are we discovering dreams, desires and meeting
needs?
- Only Arkansas, Indiana and Texas have made or
will soon make a college preparatory curriculum
the norm-Achieve - Only six states require 4 years of grade-level
English-Achieve - Only five states require all students to take 4
years of Math 22 states do not specify which
math courses-Achieve
11Whats the difference between guidance and
counseling?
- Guidance is the help that ALL students receive
from parents, teachers, counselors, and others to
assist with educational, personal/social and
career development.
- Counseling is the help that SOME students receive
from professionals to overcome personal and
social problems that interfere with learning.
National ratio of counselor to students is 1 to
477 in Georgia 1-457. ASCA school counselor,
American School Counselor Association, May/June
2004 ASCA recommends the ration 1-250
12Rationale
- Counselors are at a ratio of 1 counselor to 457
students. Some middle school counselors have as
many as 700 students to whom they are supposed to
provide services. - Most counselors spend 47 of their time in
off-task/non-program duties including test
administration, SST coordinator/paperwork,
morning/after/lunch duty, scheduling,
registration and enrollment not to mention
Governors Honors and the expected role as
financial aid administrator. - Georgia School Counselors Association, Fall
Conference, 2002 474 survey participants
13Key Points
- All groups call for higher standards
- Only 24 of high school graduates say they faced
high expectations and were challenged in high
school. Those who faced high expectations in high
school are much more likely to feel prepared for
the expectations they now face. - Knowing what they know today, 65 of college
students and 77 of non-students say they would
have worked harder in high school. - 62 of college students and 72 of non-students
would have taken at least one more difficult
course. - High school graduates, college instructors, and
employers strongly embrace reforms that raise
standards and requirements for graduation.
14Most Grads Cite Gaps In At Least One Skill
(In each area, saying there are at least some
gaps in their preparation)
35 of college students report large gaps in at
least one area, 86 report some gaps in at least
one area.
Oral communication/public speaking Science Mathem
atics Doing research Quality of writing that is
expected Reading/understandingcomplicated
materials
15The Career Planning Process
Educators assist students in answering the
following questions
WHO AM I ? (Self-knowledge) Helping students
discover their interest, aptitudes and the things
that are important to them.
WHERE AM I GOING? (Career/Educational
Exploration) Helping students discover their
numerous options in the world of work and the
relationship work has with education.
HOW AM I GOING TO GET THERE? (Planning/Management)
Helping students gather information and
formulate a plan of action to reach their career
goal.
16Think, Pair, Share!
- Thinking about what has been said so far,
summarize to the person sitting next to you one
ah-ha point made. - Decide in your own subject area/role in the
school how you will integrate careers from this
point forward and share with a partner - Be prepared to share one or both answers 3
minutes from now!
17One Minute Passed
18Two Minutes Have Passed
19Times Almost Up!
- Three Minutes Have Passed --
- Times Up!
20Career Development is
- A lifelong process by which individuals define
and redefine career-related choices and outcomes.
(NOICC, March 1994)
21Basic assumptions are
- ALL educators are career developersTeachers
make all other professions possible - ALL students are expected to work, therefore, ALL
students need career developmentThe future of
work is LEARNING a living - Parents are the greatest influence in a students
career decision-making process. Many studies
show that young people cite their parents most
frequently as the main influence in their
occupational plans. No other group even comes
close. -- Sarah M. Shoffner and Richard H.
Klemer, 1973
22Career Survey
- Before you can focus on career interests and
educational requirements, you need to know what
is most important to you. Use the exercise below
to learn who you are. Rank the items below as
Very Important (VI), Somewhat Important (SI), or
Relatively Important (RI). ____ Making a lot of
money. ____ Surpassing the expectations of
family friends.____ Exploring new
subjects.____ Playing on a prestigious
team.____ Getting a well-paying job upon
graduation.____ Becoming more understanding of
others.____ Becoming more sophisticated.____
Being able to be creative and try new
things.____ Living up to the expectations of
family friends.____ Becoming recognized as
exceptional in some way.____ Becoming an expert
at something.____ Encountering a real
challenge.____ Becoming more independent.____
Learning more about who I am.____ Making a
contribution to society.____ Making new
friends.____ Learning and gaining
knowledge.____ Meeting different people.____
Making contacts for future employment. - Now identify the five most important statements
in the list above. Then, rank them from one to
five with one being your absolute top choice.
Let these five choices guide you in the career
development process. - Â
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24Integrating Careers Into Curriculum
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27Web Resources for Careers in the Classroom
- Bureau of Labor Statistics What Interests You?
http//www.bls.gov/k12/html/edu_over.htmCareer
and Technical Student Organizations
http//www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ovae/pi/cte/v
so.html Job Star Career Guides Index
http//jobstar.org/tools/career/index.cfmTeachers
' Guide to Bureau Labor Statistics
http//www.bls.gov/k12/teachers_guide.htm US
Dept. of Labor Employment Projections
http//www.bls.gov/emp/home.htm - What You Need to Know About Careers
http//about.com/careers/ - Careers in Georgia
- http//www.careers.org/reg/crusa-ga-jobs-and-care
ers-in-georgia.html - Careers in Atlanta
- http//www.atlantacareer.com/
- Georgia School to Work Program
- http//www.dtae.org/gastw/menu.html
-
28More Web Resources for the Classroom
- GCIS Georgia Career Information System
- http//www.gcic.peachnet.edu/GCIC_About20GCIS.ht
m - SREB Southern Regional Education Board (High
Schools That Work/Middle Schools That Work) - http//www.sreb.org/
- TAP (Teacher as Advisor Program)
- http//www.glc.k12.ga.us/pandp/careerdev/teacheras
advisor.htm - TAP Curriculum for Classroom
- http//www.georgiacrn.org/CareerDevelopmentProgram
/DeliverySystem/TAPCurriculum.htm - Middle School Career Development Classroom
Activities - http//www.gcic.peachnet.edu/RD/brochure/smartpage
1.htm - High School Career Development Classroom
Activities - http//www.gcic.peachnet.edu/RD/brochure/smartpage
4.htm