Title: Governance in Career and Technical Education
1Governance in Career and Technical Education
2State Governance
- At the state level there is typically a state
board of education. - In North Carolina the State Board has 13 members
- Eight representing eight regions of the state
- Three at-large members
- The Lieutenant Governor and the state Treasurer
- The eleven citizens are appointed by the governor
with approval from the General Assembly - The State Board establishes state level
educational policy.
3School Governance
- The Department of Public Instruction (DPI) is
responsible for implementing state board
policies, legislative mandates and federal laws. - For example if the state board of education says
test 4th graders, DPI develops the test and does
the testing - In many states this group is called the
Department of Education.
4School Governance
- The head person in the Department of Public
Instruction is the State Superintendent of
Education - Dr. June Atkinson is the State Superintendent and
is elected by popular vote. - In other states some superintendents are elected
and some are appointed.
5School Governance
- Within the DPI there are three major divisions
- Financial and Business Services
- Responsible for budgets, accounting,
transportation, lunch programs, textbooks,
purchasing, etc. - Information and Technology Services
- Student records, instructional technology
6DPI Divisions
- Instructional and Accountability Services
- Accountability Division
- Student testing
- Exceptional Children Division
- School Improvement Division
- Instructional Services Division
- Academic areas
- Career Technical Education
7Career and Technical Education
- The director of Career and Technical Education is
currently Rebecca Payne, . - CTE in North Carolina has 3 Section Chiefs that
have responsibility for their program areas. The
sections chiefs oversee - 1. Business and Marketing Education
- 2. Agriculture, Family and Consumer Sciences,
Technology Education, and TI - 3. Health Occupations, Special Needs, and Career
Exploration
8Workforce Development
- There are no DPI staff members responsible for
agricultural education because these folks are
located at NCSU. - Agricultural Education is the only vocational
program that has their leadership outside of DPI - This fact is resented by the other vocational
areas and can be a source of conflict and
jealousy. - Agricultural Education has a larger staff and
larger budget than the other areas.
9In North Carolina
- The Department of Public Instruction (DPI) faced
severe downsizing in the early 1990s. - The number of DPI Ag. Ed. positions was slated to
go from 4 to 1. - When the agriculture teachers learned of this,
they took action.
10In North Carolina
- In the mid 1990s, the state legislature created 5
new state level agricultural education positions
at North Carolina State University. - This new leadership scheme was implemented in
1996. - These individuals performed the duties that were
formerly done by the Ag. Ed. consultants in the
DPI.
11Leadership in North Carolina
Gerald Barlowe is the State Agricultural
Education Coordinator.
David Harris isthe Western Coordinatorstationed
atFletcher
Jason Davis is the FFA coordinator and is at NCSU
Aaron Fleming is the State Curriculum
Coordinator and Southwest Region Coordinator
Horace Johnson is the Central coordinator,
stationedat Lillington
Benjie Forrest isthe Eastern Coordinatorstation
ed at Plymouth
12Leadership in North Carolina
The state is divided into eight regions
Northeast
Northwest
Central
East Central South Central West Central
Western
Southwest
Southeast
13Local Governance
- At the local level, there is school board that
- Establishes local educational policy
- Hires school officials such as the superintendent.
14Local Governance
- Most counties in North Carolina have a county
wide school system (there are some exceptions) - Every county has a Career and Technical Education
Director (Vocational Director) - These people are responsible for CTE programs at
the county level.
15Local Schools
- Each school is headed by a Principal.
- Typically, a school is organized by Departments.
- Typically, there is a Career Technical
Education Department. - One of the CTE teachers serves as the department
head.
16Chain of Command
- So who does an agriculture teacher report to?
Superintendent
County CTE Director
DPI
Principal
Why isnt there an arrow to the Ag. Ed. Team at
NCSU?
Department Chair
17NCSU Question
- The Ag Ed Team at NCSU does not provide
leadership to the teachers by mandate or
coercion. - They lead by providing service and through
inspiration and motivation (real leadership) - Ag teachers voluntarily work with the NCSU Ag Ed
Team
18Leadership in Ag. Ed.
- A number of other states have adopted the NC
model. - South Carolina
- Louisiana
- Montana
- New Mexico
19If a Martian landed
- Where would you take this person?
Greetings Earthlings! Take me to your leader (in
agricultural education)!
20Once the answer was simple!
- The Smith-Hughes Act of 1917 (the act that
provided federal funds to support the teaching of
high school agricultural education) established a
Federal Board for Vocational Education. - The Federal Board ruled with an iron hand.
21The Federal Board
- The Federal Board appointed individuals to
Supervise agricultural education on a national
basis - There was a national Chief
- There were regional supervisors (4 regions of the
country) - Later, subject matter experts were added along
with people with FFA responsibilities. - In 1962, there were 12 national agricultural
education officials
22The Feds
- The agricultural education officials in the
federal government had absolute power. - They could threaten states with lose of funding
- What they said was interpreted to be the law.
- They required all types of reports and records to
make sure Smith-Hughes funds were being used
properly.
23The Tide Turns
- The Vocational Education Act of 1963 did away
with categorical funding for agricultural
education.
24The 1963 Act
- Section 16
- Nothing contained in this part shall be
construed to authorize any department, agency,
officer, or employee of the United States to
exercise any direction, supervision, or control
over the curriculum, program of instruction,
administration, or personnel of any educational
institution of school system - This signaled the end of strong federal (and
state) control over agricultural education.
25The Fallout of the 1963 Act
- As federal agricultural education officials
retired they were not replaced. - By 1980 the number of federal level agricultural
education officials had dropped to (2) two.
26The Feds Today
- Today, there are 2 federal agricultural education
officials. - The only reason they exist is because of a
provision in Public Law 740 (the law passed in
1950 giving FFA a federal charter)
27The Feds Today
- The two federal officials today work primarily
with the national FFA where they have some real
authority. - They have no real power over state agricultural
education programs. - Their leadership status within Agricultural
Education is sort of like that possessed by the
Queen of England it is more titular and
honorary than real.
28The Federal Officials in Ag. Ed.
29Agric. Education Leadership
- Because of the decline in Federal leadership, the
profession created an independent National
Council for Agricultural Education in the
mid-1980s.
The National Council for Agricultural Education
provides leadership, coordination and support for
the continuous improvement of agricultural
education.
30Who Leads other CTE Programs?
- Answer There is no defined national leadership
for other CTE program areas. - Professional organizations within those program
areas are left to provide the national leadership.