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Steven Glyer Director Education Technology and CTE Newport-Mesa Unified School District.

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Presentation on theme: "Steven Glyer Director Education Technology and CTE Newport-Mesa Unified School District."— Presentation transcript:

1 Steven Glyer Director Education Technology and CTE Newport-Mesa Unified School District

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9 Elementary

10 High School

11 Elementary High School College

12 Elementary High School Marriage College

13 Elementary High School Marriage Family College

14 Elementary High School Marriage Family College Career

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16 $1 Trillion Dollars

17 3,000,000,000 people year 2000

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20 AVERAGE WEEKLY EARNINGS from 1970 to 2005 (in 1982 dollars)

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22 Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce Report: America’s Choice: High Skills or Low Wages Released Spring 1990 Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce Report: America’s Choice: High Skills or Low Wages Released Spring 1990

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26 Released December 2006 The Report of the New Commission On the Skills of the American Workforce

27 Engineering Graduates 950,000

28 Engineering Graduates United States 60,000 950,000

29 Engineering Graduates United States 60,000 950,000135,000

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33 Number ONE Number ONE Aerospace Waste Management Waste Management Health Care Health Care Entertainment Energy Bio Technology Bio Technology Nano Technology Nano Technology Automotive

34 20 th Century

35 $1 Trillion Dollars

36 21 st Century

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38 Moving work, but not people from rich nations to poor nations.

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45 What nation, rich or poor, is there greater incentive to automate? What nation, rich or poor, is there greater incentive to automate?

46 Expertise Flexibility Learn Fast

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48 Learning & Innovation Skills Creativity & Innovation Skills Critical Thinking & Problem Solving Skills Communication & Collaboration Skills

49 Information, Media and Technology Skills Information Literacy Media Literacy ICT Literacy

50 Life and Career Skills Flexibility & Adaptability Initiative & Self-Direction Social & Cross-Cultural Skills Productivity & Accountability Leadership & Responsibility

51 Creativity: The ability to see patterns and possibilities where others see chaos.

52 Innovation: Acting on these patterns or possibilities to produce goods and services.

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54 Schools Today Created for the 20 th Century Factory Workers Farm Workers

55 CHALLENGE

56 4 Year College BA Degree

57 “One Way to Win” Pressure High Stakes Testing Globalization Professional Careers All Decent Jobs Will Require a BA Social Class & Status Prejudice Against Non-professional Work Equal Opportunity Open Admission Financial Aid NCLB

58 Post High School

59 For every twenty 9 TH graders

60 6 drop out

61 For every twenty 9 TH graders 6 graduates are work-bound 6 drop out

62 For every twenty 9 TH graders 6 graduates are work-bound 8 become college freshman 6 drop out

63 For every twenty 9 TH graders 6 graduates are work-bound 8 become college freshman 6 drop out 4 are college dropouts

64 For every twenty 9 TH graders 6 graduates are work-bound 8 become college freshman 4 graduate from college 6 drop out 4 are college dropouts

65 For every twenty 9 TH graders 6 graduates are work-bound 8 become college freshman 4 graduate from college 2 secure high skills/high wage occupations 6 drop out 4 are college dropouts

66 For every twenty 9 TH graders 6 graduates are work-bound 8 become college freshman 4 graduate from college 2 secure high skills/high wage occupations 6 drop out 4 are college dropouts 2 are underemployed

67 Remedial Education in Higher Education Source: National Center for Education Statistics, 2000b

68 Remedial Education in Higher Education Source: National Center for Education Statistics, 2000b

69 Remedial Education in Higher Education Source: National Center for Education Statistics, 2000b

70 Remedial Education in Higher Education Source: National Center for Education Statistics, 2000b

71 Demand for Higher Education to the Year 2010 Source: US Dept. Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2004 DegreeSupplyDemand % Under- Employed Doctoral 47,10076,0000% Master’s 439,000 Bachelor’s 1,324,000

72 Demand for Higher Education to the Year 2010 Source: US Dept. Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2004 DegreeSupplyDemand % Under- Employed Doctoral 47,10076,0000% Master’s 439,00063,40086% Bachelor’s 1,324,000

73 Demand for Higher Education to the Year 2010 Source: US Dept. Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2004 DegreeSupplyDemand % Under- Employed Doctoral 47,10076,0000% Master’s 439,00063,40086% Bachelor’s 1,324,000730,40045%

74 New Jobs by Education and Training Levels— 28% BA or higher Source: California Workforce Dept., 2007

75 New Jobs by Education and Training Levels— 28% BA or higher

76 Jobs Across the Economy Source: California Workforce Dept., 2007 Even with limited training, one can find good jobs paying a livable wage. Each of the following has many openings. 12 months OJT or less: –Sales Representatives $59,850 –Exec. Secretaries $43,277 –Truck Drivers $38,070 –Customer Service Reps $33,665 12 months OJT to Associate Degree –Registered Nurse$71,927 –Computer Support $49,626 –Police and Sheriffs$65,194 –Carpenters$47,310

77 Orange County – Education/Training Requirements for Occupations Source: California Employment Development Dept, 2005

78 Orange County – Education/Training Requirements for Occupations Source: California Employment Development Dept, 2005

79 Job Growth Occupation % Growth 20022012 Environmental Engineers 38.2% Accountants & Auditors 19.5% Source: U.S. Dept. of Labor’s Monthly Labor Review (Hecker, 2004, p. 80)

80 Job Growth Occupation % Growth 20022012 Environmental Engineers 38.2%47,00065,000 Accountants & Auditors 19.5%1,055,0001,260,000 Source: U.S. Dept. of Labor’s Monthly Labor Review (Hecker, 2004, p. 80)

81 Job Growth Occupation % Growth 20022012 Environmental Engineers 38.2%47,00065,000 Accountants & Auditors 19.5%1,055,0001,260,000 Source: U.S. Dept. of Labor’s Monthly Labor Review (Hecker, 2004, p. 80)

82 For every twenty 9 TH graders 6 graduates are work-bound 8 become college freshman 4 graduate from college 2 secure high skills/high wage occupations 6 drop out 4 are college dropouts 2 are underemployed

83 For every twenty 9 TH graders 6 graduates are work-bound 8 become college freshman 4 graduate from college 2 secure high skills/high wage occupations 6 drop out 4 are college dropouts 2 are underemployed NOT WORKING

84 What We Tell Students Future economic security is a 4-yr degree Students believe this – –94% plan to continue their education –84% at the baccalaureate level

85 Pressure to Attend Parent pressure is increasing –Today  83% sophomores –10 years ago  65% Teachers and Counselors –1982  32% –1992  65%

86 A-G Focus CTE –1987  74% of students enrolled in CTE –2005  34% enrolled in CTE A-G –2005  25% enrolled freshman at UC failed basic English proficiency – required to take a basic writing course. Mean GPA was 3.79 –2005  Incoming freshman in CSU 36% remedial math --- GPA was 3.17 55% remedial English --- GPA was 3.19

87 Readiness for College We assume that all who go to college are academically qualified –But only 40% of high school grads have academic readiness for college level work And most who begin a 4-year college take remedial courses. And the majority who do, don’t graduate

88 College Level Jobs College-level jobs for those who do graduate –1960’s  1 in 5 failed to find college-level work –1990’s  1 in 3 failed –Today  1 in 2 failed

89 Costs Financial: Two thirds of all students receive financial aid and two thirds of it is loans. Between 2001 and 2006 private student education loans increased from $4,000,000 to $17,000,000 annually

90 CTE and At-Risk Students A combination of 60% academic courses and 40% CTE is the most effective drop-out prevention program in the American high school. Compared to students with similar academic background, CET students are more likely to –Graduate from high school –Be employed in skilled occupations –Or be in college Plan, 2002 Harvey 2001

91 CTE/Academics & College Nationally, 83% of CTE students also complete an academic concentration (Plank) 80% of this group purse post-secondary education within 8 years of graduating (NCES) Of those pursuing associate degrees, 70% graduated (NCES)

92 Recommendations 1.Require CTE coursework for ALL K-12 students 2.Fund standards-aligned CTE foundation programs in 9 th and 10 th grades 3.Include CTE in school accountability measurement systems 4.Increase the number of CTE credentialed teachers

93 Recommendations 5.Continue taxpayer investment into K-12 related facilities and equipment 6.Increase career awareness and institutionalize the alignment of K-12 public instruction with the skill and education needs of available careers in the actual economy 7.Require publicly funded university systems to value CTE and applied learning in their admissions process.

94 Gd. K-6Gd. 7-8Gd. 9-10Gd. 11-12 Vocabulary Meet the Parents Explore Alternatives Verify Those Alternatives

95 Tentative career Interest identified Career interests Verified and refined High SchoolAfter High School 9 th – 10 th 11 th – 12 th 13th Honors AP Baccalaureate Pre-baccalaureate/ Tech prep Pre-baccalaureate/ Tech prep Work-based Learning/co-op CTE Work-based Learning/co-op CTE Core Academic Core Academic Work-based Learning/co-op CTE Work-based Learning/co-op CTE Dual enrollment/ middle college Dual enrollment/ middle college Competitive 4-year college Competitive 4-year college 1- or 2-year Technical college 1- or 2-year Technical college Full-time employment Apprenticeship Military Full-time employment Apprenticeship Military

96 SCHEMA FOR STUDENT PROGRESSION THROUGH THE SYSTEM International Baccalaureate (IB) Exams State Board Transfer Examination Advanced Placement (AP) Exams Technical Exams Choice of one or more of the exams above Upper Secondary Academic Program (Nominal 2 Yrs., e.g., AP, IB) Regional Vocational School, Community or Technical College (Nominal 2-3 Years) Optional Additional Academics STATE BOARD QUALIFYING EXAMINATION Common School (Nominal 10 Grades) Preschool and Kindergarten

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