Title: Developing Perkins IV Programs of Study
1Developing Perkins IV Programs of Study
- WILLIAM L. Walker Jr.
- Director
- John L. Davidson
- Deputy Director
- Arkansas Department of Workforce Education
- Power point Credits
- Kim Green National Association of State
Directors of Career and Technical Ed. - Karl Fisch/Scott Mcleod-Did you Know
- Dan Hull
- Ann Benson
- Howie DiBlasi I.T. Director Durango School
District
2Spirit of the New Law
- Leading Career and Technical Education into the
21st century - Program improvement
- Global competition
- Ensuring modern, durable and rigorous CTE programs
3Perkins ask Agriculture Instructors to prepare
our students for career pathways which will keep
the United States competitive in the future world
of work!(purpose 7). Do you knowwhy?
4Because sometimes size does matter.
5China will soon become the number one
English-speaking country in the world.
6During the course of this presentation . . .
7- 60 babies will be born in the U.S.
- 244 babies will be born in China.
- 351 babies will be born in India.
8If youre one in a million . . .
9In China there are 1,300 other people Just like
you!
10The 25 of the population in China with the
highest IQs . . .
11is greater than the total population of North
America.
12Translation for our CTE Community as we prepare
for the futureChina has more future highly
skilled workers (honor students) than we have
students.
13China Mobile is the worlds largest cellular
company.They have over 301 million customers.
China has more cell phones than the U.S. has
peopleBusiness Week 2-5-2007
14Perkins programsshould promote globally
competitivehigh wage / high demand / high skill
/ and emerging career pathways(purpose
1).andIt is critical that these Programs of
Study prepare students for a Career .not Just a
JOB!Do you know why?
15If you took every single job in the U.S. today
and shipped it to China . . .
16it still would have a labor surplus.
17The U.S. Department of Labor estimates that
todays learner will have 10-14 jobs . . .By
the age of 38
18According to the U.S. Department of Labor . . .
191 out of 4 workers today is working for a
company for whom they have been employed less
than 1 year.
20More than 1 out of 2 are working for a company
for whom they have worked less than 5 years.
21What wages will our students complete
with?Factory workers in Ho Chi Minh City make
62 a monthIn Beijing, China a teacher makes
454 a month A nurse 260 a month In India
accounting graduates work for 100 a month
22According to former Secretary of Education
Richard Riley . . .
23the top 10 jobs that will be in demand in 2010
didnt exist in 2004.
24We are currently preparing students for jobs
that dont yet exist . . .
25using technologies that havent yetbeen
invented . . .
26in order to solve problems we dont even
know are problems yet.
27The knowledge of current and future technology
is critical for our Agriculture Instructors if
we improve the academic and technical skills of
our students!DO YOU KNOW WHY?
28Fully half of all teens could be considered
Internet Content Creators
29Teens create blogs, wikis or webpages, and posted
original artwork, photography, stories or videos
online
308 out of 10 people do not know what a blog, wiki
or podcast is!Do We?
31There are over 70 million blogs and counting1,
000,000 (million ) posts each day on the blogs
The blogosphere is over 60 times bigger than it
was 3 years ago.
32China has 17 million blogs
- 35 of all internet users in China have a BLOG..
- The Blog Herald-2006
3381 of our students have e-mail accounts75 of
our students have IM (Instant messenger
accounts)97 of our students believe technology
use is very important in education( Netday
survey, 2005)
34The fastest growing age group for using the
Internet is.2-5 year olds ( NetDay News ,
2005)
35YouTube serves 100 million videos per day.
served 2.5 billion videos to nearly 20
million unique visitors by June of 2006.Do we
know what YouTube is?
361 of every 8 couples married in the U.S. last
year met online.
37There are over 106 million registered users of
MySpace (as of September 2006).
38If MySpace were a country,it would be the
11th-largest in the world (between Japan and
Mexico).
39MySpace users call up an average of 31.5 billion
unique page views per month----yes 31.5 BILLION
40The average MySpace page is visited 30 times a
day.
41Perkins directs our CTE programs to
modernizeUtilizing current and future technology
Do you knowwhy?
42We are living in exponential times.
43There are over 2.7 billion searches performed on
Google each month.
44The number of text messages sent and received
every day exceeds the population of the planet.
45There are about 540,000 words in the English
language . . .
46about 5 times as many as during Shakespeares
time.
47More than 3,000 new books are published . . .
48daily.
49It is estimated that more unique new information
will be generated worldwide this year than in
the previous 5,000 years.
50The amount of new technical information is
doubling every 2 years.
51For students starting a four-year technical or
college degree, this means that . . .
52half of what they learn in their first year of
study will be outdated by their third year of
study.
53It is predicted to double every 72 hours by
2010.
54Young People Urgently Need New Skills to Succeed
in the Global Economy Headline in the news
Nov. 6. 2006AndTechnology has become an
indispensable tool in their education. ( Netday
survey, 2005)
55Our Agriculture Programs of Study should
Emphasize to our students the necessity of
learning with others around the world
56 Our Agriculture Programs of Study must teach
our students to deal with massive amounts of
information.Alan November
57Our Agriculture Programs of Study should teach
all students global communication.Alan November
58Our Programs of Study should teach our Ag
students to be self-directed and understand how
to organize more and more of their own
learning. Alan November
59Unless we do something! our young people will
be woefully under prepared for the demands of
todays workplace, Ken Kay, President of the
Partnership for 21st Century Skills
60Why Perkins IV?Because CTE and Agriculture
Education can make the difference!Now you know!
61Purposes of Perkins IV
- Increase opportunities for individuals to keep
America competitive - A focus on high skill, high wage, high demand
occupations
62Purposes of Perkins IV
- Promote partnerships (education, workforce
boards, business, industry, etc.) - Provide technical assistance and professional
development - Provide increased flexibility
-
- Conduct and disseminate research and information
on best practices
63Purposes of Perkins IV
- Develop challenging academic and technical
standards and related challenging, integrated
instruction
6410 Decisions or Opportunities for Leadership
- Define High Skill, High Wage, High Demand
- Determine In-State Distribution of Funds
- Utilize a Reserve Fund to Support State Goals
- Strengthen Articulation Agreements
- Develop State Defined Programs of Study
- Define Criteria for the Local Applications
- Utilize Consortia to accomplish State CTE
Initiatives - Determine how to institute Tech Prep
- Develop an Accountability system to improve CTE
- Determine Incentives, Sanctions and Improvement
Plans
65What is CTE under Perkins IV and what has changed?
- Change in definition to eliminate the focus on
sub-baccalaureate careers - Emphasis on preparation for postsecondary
education and employment - Preparation not only on job readiness but on
academic and technical preparation - Increased emphasis on achievement of a degree,
certificate or credential
66Programs of Study should
- Include Secondary postsecondary Components
- Include a Non-duplicative sequence of courses
that is coherent and rigorous - Should provide opportunities for dual/concurrent
enrollment in a postsecondary program - Should Lead to an industry-recognized credential,
certificate, or an associate or baccalaureate
degree
67 State Plans Should Require
- CTE programs that are
- Aligned with rigorous and challenging academic
content standards and student achievement
standards (NCLB) - Relevant and challenging at the postsecondary
level - Lead to employment in high skill, high wage, or
high demand occupations - Prepare CTE students to graduate with a diploma
from secondary schools
68State Plans Should include
- Development of an implementation plan for
programs of study - Development of a Plan for Articulation agreements
to link Secondary and Postsecondary programs of
study - Plan for dissemination of Program of Study
Information to students, parents, academic
teachers, CTE teachers, administrators, and
business and industry partners
69State Plans should give emphasis to Programs of
Study which
- Relate to regional economy
- Focus on high skill, high wage, high demand
70 Each State develops the Definition for High
Wage, High Skill, High Demand?It should be by
state and local data?
- High Wage for Arkansas
- Pathways in which 50 of jobs are 1.20 above
the state average for all Arkansas industries - HIGH SKILL for Arkansas
- Leads to an Apprenticeship, Associate Degree, or
identified Credential - High Demand for Arkansas
- From list provided by Workforce Services in which
50 of jobs in a pathway are listed as high
demand. (Are the occupations correctly
classified? We have formed a committee for
review) -
-
71Agriculture Cluster High Wage, High Skill,
High Demand must meet 3 of 3 by state or local
area
- Agriculture Cluster
- Animal Systems (ANIMAL SYSTEMS)
-
- Plant Systems (PLANT SYSTEMS)
- Food products-NEPS (no existing program of study)
72ARKANSAS Program Improvement funding
opportunities for HW/HS/HD Programs of Study..3
year (end of Perkins IV goal 60 spent in
this area) The Local Plan must identify the
following
- What industry certifications are available?
- For Programs, for Teachers, for Students
- What professional development is needed (3 year
plan)? - For CT teachers-academic teachers-administrators-c
ounselors For integration, applied learning,
curriculum planning, all aspects of industry,
skills to work with special populations, how to
access and utilize data, academic and technical
requirements of the program of study - The new software or curriculum that will be
required? - What additional frameworks will be added to
provide the adequate technical skills? - Additional equipment (above the minimum) that is
needed? - Necessary resources that are needed to support
special populations?
73ARKANSAS Funding opportunities TO ASSIST all CTE
programs of study meet the IndicatorsFirst
identify the indicator to be addressed with the
uses of funds
- Academic Attainment of based on State NCLB
Assessments - CTE Skill Attainment
- Graduation Rate
- Placement Rate of Completers
- Non-Traditional enrollment and Completion
74Second Select the Required or Permissive use of
funds
- Strengthen the academic and CT skills of students
through integration of a coherent sequence of
courses and the required academics - Link secondary and postsecondary CTE programs of
Study - Provide CTE students with and understanding of
all aspects of an industry and work based
learning - Develop and improve and expand the use of
technology (training) - Provide professional development to secondary and
postsecondary CTE teachers, academic teachers,
administrators, counselors - Develop and implement evaluations of CTE program
including assessment and meeting needs of special
populations - Involve parents, business, and labor in the
design, implementation and evaluation of CTE
programs - Provide career guidance
- Provide business partnerships
75Second Select the Required or Permissive use of
funds
- Provide programs for special populations
- Assist (CTSOS) student organizations
- Mentoring and support services
- Purchase of equipment and instructional aids that
support academic and technical skill attainment - Teacher Preparation Programs
- Support entrepreneurship education and training
- Develop new CTE courses to prepare for high
skill, high wage, high demand or concurrent
credit - Support Career themed learning communities
- Support family and consumer sciences
- Support CTE programs for dropouts
- Assist participants in finding and appropriate
job - Support training and activities in
non-traditional fields - Support automotive technologies programs
- Pool funds for innovative initiatives
76Second Select the Required or Permissive use of
funds
- Notable additions to use of funds- Perkins IV
- Activities that facilitate transition from 2-yr.
to 4-yr. - Entrepreneurship education and training
- Development of Programs of Study
- Dual or concurrent enrollment opportunities
- Development and support of small, personalized
career-themed learning communities - Pooling a portion of funds with other recipients
for innovation - Expanding postsecondary programs offerings at
more accessible times/formats
77States can set aside 10 of the local funds for a
reserve fund!
- Other ideas
- Focus on an industry area
- Focus on a performance indicator
- Send out competitively or by a formula
- States have broad discretion in using the reserve
fund - Can use to form consortia (including tech prep
programs) - Programs of study
- Incentive Grants
- Teacher Prep programs
AN ARKANSAS RESERVE FUND HAS BEEN CREATED TO
IMPROVE THE PROGRAMS OF STUDY IN OUR STATE THAT
ARE HIGH WAGE, HIGH SKILL, HIGH DEMAND WITH A
1,000,000 AVAILABLE TO SECONDARY PROGRAMS.
78consortia
- Perkins IV allows eligible recipients to form
consortia for - Professional development/teacher prep
- Data collection and use
- Programs of study
- Technical assessments
- Arkansas will encourage maximum use of the
consortia concept for single or multiple focus
activates.
79(No Transcript)
80A Career Pathway is a coherent, articulated
sequence of rigorous academic and
career/technical courses, commencing in the ninth
grade and leading to an associate degree,
baccalaureate degree and beyond, an industry
recognized certificate, and/or licensure. The
Career Pathway is developed, implemented, and
maintained in partnership among secondary and
postsecondary education, business, and employers.
Career Pathways are available to all students,
including adult learners, and may lead to
rewarding careers.
81Career clusters link the subjects students study
in school and the things they like to do in their
spare time with the things they might one day do
to earn a living.
82Students Can Always Change Their Mind About Their
Career Plans And Probably Will. Even If They Do,
We Can Use The Career Cluster System To Help
Students Focus Their Efforts As They Explore
Their Career Opportunities.
83An Arkansas Program of Study is a subset within
the National Career Cluster/Pathway system to
allow multiple options and specialization. The
Program of Study is utilized when the Pathway
learning is broad and cannot fit easily within a
defined sequence units
84 Arkansas Cluster Organization We did not want
Clusters to be a NEW PROGRAM We did not want
Clusters to be a REFORM ACTIVITY We did not want
Clusters to be a NEW TREND
- Clusters were the delivery process ( a way of
life) for - Staff Organization
- Framework development
- Assessment
- Guidance
- Communication
85Career Clusters/Pathways are referenced in all
communication with school administrators and in
all CTE policy documents.
- Dear Dr. Johnson
- The hospitality extended to my staff during their
recent visit of November 16, 2004, to your school
district is greatly appreciated. I would like to
thank you and the other staff members for their
cooperation and assistance. As a result of our
visit, the following comments and recommendations
are made - OCCUPATIONAL AREAS
- Agricultural Science and Technology
- Career Cluster Agriculture, Food Natural
Resources - Pathway (Program of Study) Power, Structural,
and Technical Systems (Agri) Plant Systems
(Horticulture) - The program serves 149 students with 21 percent
being non-traditional. The program had sixteen
completers last year and has made plans to
strengthen that number. The instructor is fully
qualified and has become very active with his
professional organization. The facilities are
clean and orderly. Safety records are maintained
on site. The shop is color-coded and very well
organized. The FFA is very active on the local,
district and state levels. The program boasts
89 FFA membership. - Recommendations
86CAREER CLUSTER AGRICULTURE, FOOD, AND NATURAL
RESOURCES The production, processing, marketing,
distribution, financing, and development of
agricultural commodities and resources, including
food, fiber, wood products, natural resources,
horticulture, and other plant and animal
products/resources Program Description Agricultura
l science and technology education is an
organized educational program designed to provide
career exploration and technical preparation for
students who are preparing for career success in
the Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources
Career Cluster. The knowledge and performance
skills required for successful achievements
and/or advancement in agricultural occupations
constitute the central focus of the
program. Occupational Program of Study The
Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources Career
Cluster offers sequential career focus programs
of study in pathways.
87- 491150 Agriculture Science Technology
- Credit 1 Grade Levels 9-12
- This is a foundation course for all agriculture
programs of study. Topics covered include
general agriculture, FFA, leadership, record
keeping, Supervised Agricultural Experiences
(SAEs), animal science, plant science, soil
science, and agricultural mechanics. - Does course count in required 38 units and, if
yes, how Yes Career Technical - Does course count in the 21 units required for
graduation Yes - Licensure required to teach this
course 010 Agriculture - 217 Agricultural Sciences Technology
- 218 Agricultural Sciences Technology
88Programs of study (pathways) Agribusiness
Systems
89Power, Structural, and Technical Systems
(Agricultural)
90Animal Systems
91Plant Systems (Biological)
Plant Systems (Horticulture)
92AGRICULTURE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY CLUSTER
AGRICULTURE, FOOD, AND NATURAL RESOURCES PATHWAY
PLANT SYSTEMS (Biological) PROGRAM OF STUDY
PLANT SYSTEMS (Biological) MINIMUM INSTRUCTIONAL
EQUIPMENT AND SOFTWARE
93Elective Agriculture courses to complete 3 unit
program of Study
- Advanced Animal Science, Agricultural
Apprenticeship Agricultural Business,
Agricultural Electricity, Agricultural
Graphics, Agricultural Marketing,
Agricultural Metals I II Agricultural
Surveying, Agriculture Mechanics I II - Agriculture Power Systems I II
Entrepreneurship - Agriculture Science Technology Floriculture
- Agriculture Structural Systems I II Forestry
- Animal Science Aquaculture
- Biological Animal Sci Biological Plant Science
Environmental Resources Food Science - Greenhouse Management Intro to Horticulture
- Leadership Communications Managing Our Natural
Res. Nursery/Landscape Plant Science - Small Engine Technology Turf Grass Management
94CTE Programs of Study for the future
- Will be increased knowledge based rather than
equipment based - Will require education beyond high school
- Must include high levels of useful academics
- Must have accommodations for change
95Curriculum Frameworks for Programs of Study
should Determine
- Courses
- Assessment
- Alignment
- Guidance
- Dual Credit
- Work Site learning
- Contextual Teaching
96The essential characteristics of an Ideal
Secondary Program of Study include the following
- Meets state academic standards and grade-level
expectations - Meets high school testing and exit requirements
- Meets postsecondary (college) entry/placement
requirements - Provides foundation knowledge and skills in a
chosen career cluster - Provides opportunities for students to earn
college credit through dual/concurrent enrollment
or articulation agreements - Provides Nationally recognized credentials or
certifications when applicable.
97- The essential characteristics of an Ideal
Postsecondary Secondary Program of Study include
the following
- Opportunities for students to earn college credit
through dual/concurrent enrollment or
articulation agreements - Alignment and articulation with baccalaureate
programs - Industry-recognized skills and knowledge in each
cluster area - Opportunities for placement in the chosen career
clusters at multiple exit points
98John L. Davidson Deputy Director Career and
Technical EducationArkansas Department of
Workforce Education501-682-1040
- John.davidson_at_arkansas.gov