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CTE School Counselor Summer Institute June 29, 2016.

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Presentation on theme: "CTE School Counselor Summer Institute June 29, 2016."— Presentation transcript:

1 CTE School Counselor Summer Institute June 29, 2016

2 Defining Career and Technical Education Career and Technical Education is a planned program of courses and learning experiences that  begin with the exploration of career options,  supports basic academic and life skills, and  enables achievement of high academic standards, leadership, options for high skill, high wage employment preparation, and advanced and continuing education. (RCW 28C.04.100)

3 CTE Model Classroom Instruction / Theory Framework Academic Alignment Industry Standards Leadership 21 st Century Skills Shop / Lab Hands On / Project Based Technical Skills / Soft Skills Leadership 21 st Century Skills Extended Learning Outside of the Classroom Community Outreach Community Service CTSO

4 Washington CTE Foundations CTE programs are structured so that supervision, safety and the number of training stations determine the maximum number of students per classroom. (Source: CTE Program Standards)

5 Define CTE Graduation Requirement A career and technical education credit (CTE) credit means a credit resulting from a course in a CTE program or occupational education credit as contained in the CTE program standards of the office of the superintendent of public instruction. “Occupational education” means credits resulting from a series of learning experiences designed to assist the student to acquire and demonstrate competency of skills under student learning goal four and which skills are required for success in current and emerging occupations. At a minimum, these competencies shall align with the definition of an exploratory course as contained in the CTE program standards of the office of the superintendent of public instruction. An exception may be made for private schools as provided in WAC 180-90-160. (Source: WAC 180-51-068)

6 Occupational Ed Credit Can the Occupation Ed credit be waived? No. The occupational education requirement cannot be waived or met by earning a credit in another subject area. (Source: The Washington State Board of Education)

7 2 for 1 The “two-for-one” policy is a rule change (WAC 180-51-067) in effect for students in the graduating class of 2016. Students who take CTE-equivalent courses may satisfy two graduation requirements while earning one credit for a single course; hence, “two-for-one”. The purpose of this policy is to create flexibility for students to choose more elective courses or to address other graduation requirements. A CTE-equivalent course consists of two courses: one CTE, one academic. One of those courses is placed on the student’s transcript for credit. Students generally choose which course they want placed on the transcript, and this choice is driven by their High School and Beyond Plan. This practice will remain the same. Under the rule in effect through the class of 2015, WAC 180-51-066, the student earns one credit and satisfies one graduation requirement.WAC 180-51-066 The new policy will permit the second course to be “checked off” as a “met requirement” by local counseling staff. Which course is put on the transcript and which one is locally “checked off” will continue to be determined by the student, based on their post high school goals. The total number of credits the student needs to graduate will not change. Districts will continue to use a locally-developed process to enable the record-keeping needed to assure that all requirements have been met. Currently, the standardized transcript does not track the types of credits applied to courses.

8 24-Credit Diploma Personalized Pathway – Based on HSBP for specific coursework – Career goal – Four-year course plan for graduation – Plan for after graduation High School & Beyond Plan (HSBP): A non-credit graduation requirement Students answer three questions: – Who am I? – What can I become? – How do I become that? Students think about how to get the most out of high school and to plan for their future. http://www.sbe.wa.gov/graduation.php

9 Course Equivalencies CIP CodeCTE Course/FrameworkEquivalency 010901Animal Science Biology or Lab Science 011101Plant Science 030101Natural Resources 030201Natural Resources Management Policy 010000Introduction to Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources Lab Science 011001Food Science and Safety 030104AP Environmental Science 120503Culinary Arts and Food Science (1080 hrs) 120505Food Production and Services (360 hrs) 190504Food Science, Dietetics, and Nutrition 260102Biomedical Sciences 260103Biomedical-Body Systems 510808Veterinarian Assistant (540 hrs) 511614Nursing Assistant (540 hrs) 400891Principles of Technology AppliedPhysics or Lab Science 110201Computer ProgrammingScience 150613CORE Plus (540 hrs)Science 010308Agroecology and Sustainability Life Science or Lab Science 030104Environmental Science 261201Agricultural Biotechnology Science Equivalencies

10 CIP CodeCTE Course/FrameworkEquivalency 149991Engineering Design 1 Algebra 1 190401Consumer and Family Resources 270301Applied Algebra 1 270305Financial Math 100304Animation Technology Video Graphics (540 hrs) Geometry 110803Video Game Design / Digital Computer Animation (540 hrs) 460201Residential Carpentry (540 hrs) 270301Applied Algebra 2Algebra 2 110201Computer Programming 3 rd Year 150613CORE Plus (540 hrs) 279998Business Statistics Statistics Equivalency career and technical education (CTE) courses meeting the requirement set forth in RCW 28A.230.097 can be taken for credit in place of any of the courses set forth in subsections (1) through (6) of this section (WAC 180-51-068), if the courses are recorded on the student’s transcript using the equivalent academic high school department designation and course title. Course Equivalencies (cont.) Mathematics Equivalencies

11 Tech Prep Coding on HS Transcript http://www.k12.wa.us/transcripts/ http://www.k12.wa.us/transcripts/ Course Designators

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13 Multi-tiered System of Support Tier 3: Few Students Intensive individualized interventions Tier 2: Some Students Additional strategic group interventions for students at risk – JAG (Jobs for Washington Graduates); GRADS Tier 1: All Students Using evidence-based practices with guidance Core College and Career Readiness Instruction (Career and Technical Education Competencies) Establish college going culture within school climate Identify and address common challenges and barriers Support strong transitions

14 Questions Ag Programs Supervisor Becky Wallace Rebecca.wallace@k12.wa.us 360-725-62454 Business Programs Supervisor Lance Wrzesinski Lance.wrzesinski@k12.wa.us 360-725-6258 Family and Consumer Sciences Programs Supervisor Mary Nagel Mary.Nagel@k12.wa.us 360-725-6242 Health Sciences Programs Supervisor Marianna Goheen Marianna.goheen@k12.wa.us 360-725-6257 Skilled and Technical Sciences Programs Supervisor Denny Wallace Dennis.wallace@k12.wa.us 360-725-6241 STEM Programs Supervisor Clarence Dancer (CJ) Clarence.dancer@k12.wa.us 360-725-4467


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