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pinkertonacademy/cte

Welcome to the Career Awareness Program. www.pinkertonacademy.net/cte. Why Choose CTE at Pinkerton Academy?. CTE is preparing students for life after high school. In today’s world, the most sought-after employees will exhibit skills in three major areas: Strong academic and thinking skills.

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pinkertonacademy/cte

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  1. Welcome to the Career Awareness Program www.pinkertonacademy.net/cte

  2. Why Choose CTE at Pinkerton Academy? CTE is preparing students for life after high school. In today’s world, the most sought-after employees will exhibit skills in three major areas: • Strong academic and thinking skills. • Strong technical skills in the field. • Employability skills such as the ability to do teamwork and communicate effectively.

  3. Career & Technical Education Enhances academic achievement by providing real-world relevance Provides opportunities to explore multiple pathways and better career decisions Provides opportunities to enhance academic achievement for all students Creates more focused and engaged learners Provides a framework for curriculum alignment (middle school-high school-post secondary) Assists in developing a highly qualified workforce

  4. College – The American Dream The Importance of Career Planning – Recent History • 84% of high school students anticipate earning a college degree • Students who anticipate a degree are unlikely to prepare for a career following high school • More than 50% of students who begin college do not earn a degree • Rosenbaum, J.E. (2002). Beyond Empty Promises: Policies To Improve Transitions into College and Jobs. U.S.;Illinois:42.

  5. College – The American Dream The Importance of Career Planning – Current and Future Economy • 30% of the 46.8 million job openings created by 2018 will require some college (1) • Middle skill jobs (more than high school, less than a bachelors) will account for 45% of job openings through 2014.(2) • Jobs requiring an Associates degree are expected to grow the fastest at 19% (3) • “Help Wanted: projections of Jobs and Education requirement s through 2018, Center on Education and Workforce, Georgetown University, 2010, p. 13 • 2&3. BLS, Occupational Outlook, 2010/2011 Edition • Rosenbaum, J.E. (2002). Beyond Empty Promises: Policies To Improve Transitions into College and Jobs. U.S.;Illinois:42.

  6. College – The American Dream The Importance of Career Planning – Current and Future Economy in other states • Every CTE investment dollar returns in tax revenue: • Washington: $7.11 (high school) • Salt Lake City: $4.30 (community college) • Connecticut: $16.40 (community college) • Tennessee: $13M in tax revenue from CTE Program completers (high school) • Association for Career & Technical Education. www.acteonline.org.

  7. National Cluster Model Six Career Fields Sixteen Clusters Career Focused Programs

  8. Success For All Students: Post-Secondary Options • The jobs tied to the CTE programs offered at Pinkerton Academy are among the fastest growing occupations in New Hampshire (New Hampshire Employment Security Economic and Labor Market Information Bureau, New Hampshire Occupational Projections 2008-2018; 10-year growth estimates). • “Environmental Engineer” (30% growth) – Forestry/Environmental Studies • “Network/Comm. Systems Analyst” (49% growth) – Computer Technology Program • “Medical Assistant” (36%) – Health Science Technology • “Skin Care Specialist” (36%) - Cosmetology

  9. What is a Career Pathway? • A plan designed by the student to make sure what he/she learns is useful in their life. • The pathway will help put things in focus, giving a better idea of options for success.

  10. The Benefits • Counselors use clusters/pathways to help students explore options • Curriculum is made relevant BY DESIGN! • Parents can learn what academic and technical courses their children need; better preparation for college and work. • Employability, academic and technical skills are enhanced

  11. PA Catalog Page w/ 4 yr. plan

  12. ICT Requirement

  13. Economics Requirement

  14. Career Pathway Plan of Study

  15. CTE Website

  16. Career Interest Survey • A simple Career Clusters Interest Survey available at the CTE table when you enter the fair.

  17. CTE Advisory Committees • A trademark of CTE is the close partnerships that the department maintains with businesses. Each of the 18 approved career focused programs, as well as programs under consideration have an Advisory Committee. • These twenty-two committees are comprised of hundreds of practitioners and post-secondary partners who represent the occupational fields upon which the CTE programs are based. The practitioners assist classroom instructors with program development and selection of equipment. • This professional input ensures that our staff maintains real-time links with the world of work.

  18. Learning more about CTE • Tours • Meet at the Astro Café in the Academy Building • Tuesday, December 6th: 5:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. • Wednesday, December 14th: 5:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. • Quarterly newsletter • Contact us at any time with your questions, comments or concerns

  19. astrocafe@pinkertonacademy.org

  20. Pinkerton CTE Contacts437-5200, ext. 1172http://www.pinkertonacademy.net/CTE/ • Jack Grube, Director • jgrube@pinkertonacademy.org • Tracy Untiet, Assistant Director • tuntiet@pinkertonacademy.org • Doug Cullen, Career Coordinator • dcullen@pinkertonacademy.org

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