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Professional Learning February 6, 2013 Counselor Presentation. Video. Agenda: Some Intriguing Facts The State of Career and Technical Education Pickens Technical College supports Academic Success Pickens Technical College Data. Fact
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Professional Learning February 6, 2013 Counselor Presentation Video
Agenda: • Some Intriguing Facts • The State of Career and Technical Education • Pickens Technical College supports Academic Success • Pickens Technical College Data
Fact Students in CTE programs have a higher-than-average high school graduation rate. The average high school graduation rate for students concentrating in CTE programs is 90.18% compared to an average national freshman graduation rate of 74.9%. U.S. Department of Education, Office of VOAE, Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act of 2006,Report to Congress on State Performance, Program Year 2007-2008
Fact CTE students outperform their peers in reading and math—at both the secondary and postsecondary level. Secondary CTE students outperform their peers in reading and math performance levels—exceeding target levels in both areas, while the aggregate of all students failed to reach target levels. U.S. Department of Education, Perkins Consolidated Annual Reports, 2009-2010. Office of Vocational and Adult Education
Fact CTE students surpassed state target performance levels in secondary reading/language arts, secondary mathematics, and in both secondary and postsecondary technical skill attainment. U.S. Department of Education, Perkins Consolidated Annual Reports, 2009-2010. Office of Vocational and Adult Education
Fact High-risk students in CTE programs are 8 to 10 times less likely to drop out of high school in 11th or 12th grades. Kulik, James, Curriculum Tracks and High School Vocational Studies (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 1998)
Fact: Students concentrating on CTE programs in high school are more likely to attend college and stay there to graduate. 79% of CTE concentrators enrolled in postsecondary education within 2 years of high school graduation. U.S. Department of Education, Perkins Consolidated Annual Reports, 2009-2010. Office of Vocational and Adult Education
Fact 70% of students concentrating in CTE stayed in postsecondary education or transferred to a 4-year degree program (compared to overall average state target of 58%)—and transitioned to postsecondary education or employment by December of the year of graduation from high school. U.S. Department of Education, Perkins Consolidated Annual Reports, 2009-2010. Office of Vocational and Adult Education
Evolving Career and Technical Education • Vocational Model 1900s (VOC ED) • Developed to satisfy routine industry practices • Craftsmanship, repetition, high quality
Evolving Career and Technical Education • Career and Technical Education 21st Century (CTE) • Information age vs. Industrial age Technology • Tools for working. Information and communications technology (ICT) and information literacy • Ways of working.Communication and collaboration
Evolving Career and Technical Education • Career and Technical Education 21st Century (CTE) • Problem Based Learning (PBL), Advanced Critical Skills, High Academic Rigor • Ways of thinking.Creativity, critical thinking, problem-solving, decision-making and learning • Skills for living in the world.Citizenship, life and career, and personal and social responsibility Learned 21st Century Skills have proven to increase college entrance exam scores.
Evolving Career and Technical Education • Career and Technical Education MUST: • Enhance Critical Thinking • Embed Academics • Mathematics • Literacy • Science. • Support Community Needs • Community Responsibility • Environmental Responsibility • Teach Soft Skills and Ethics. • Interview/Resumes • Customer Service • Include Real-Life Experience • Internships • Auto Tune-up Fundraisers • Homebuilding
Pickens Technical College Supports Academic Success
PTC Supports Academic Success Embedded Academics
PTC Supports Academic Success • Teach 21st Century Skills • Learning to collaborate with others and connect through technology are essential skills in a information-based economy. • Ways of thinking.Creativity, critical thinking, problem-solving, decision-making and learning • Ways of working.Communication and collaboration • Tools for working. Information and communications technology (ICT) and information literacy • Skills for living in the world.Citizenship, life and career, and personal and social responsibility
PTC Support Academic Success Providing Academic Transparency with Articulation Agreements to CCCS, Industry Training and Certification High School 4-Year College Institutions Workforce Colorado Community College System (CCCS) Pickens Technical College No Post-Secondary Education
PTC Supports Academic Success • Differentiated Learning • State of the Art Lab Space • Problem Based Learning (PBL) • Real World Experiences
What PTC does to support Academic Success • Access to Industry • On the Job Experience • Internship to full employment
PTC Data • Continuing education • CCA • Most classes accepted for AAS • 4-year Institutions • Few classes accepted • Military/Other • Promotion for credit • Entry into Job Market • Skill specific • Trade specific to training • Skill nonspecific • Other
Summary • Facts about Career and Technical Education • Evolving Career and Technical Education • Pickens Technical College supports Academic Success • Pickens Technical College Data