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Nonprofit Journalism: Removing the Pressure of the Bottom Line
New Immigrants in New Places: America's Growing "Global Interior"
Career and Technology Education: It's Not Just "Vocational Education" Anymore
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2005 Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy
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Career and Technology Education: It's Not Just "Vocational Education" Anymore
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Chattanooga
Founded on a bend in the Tennessee River, Chattanooga is located in the
southeastern part of the state. A little farther south, and Chattanooga
would be the fourth largest city in Georgia instead of the fourth largest
city in Tennessee. Chattanooga was once located at a critical juncture
on the Western and Atlantic Railroad, and for decades it thrived as a
railroad hub connecting East to West. Surrounded by mountains rich with
coal and iron, it was also a thriving industrial town, and its reliance
primarily on industry and to a lesser extent the railroad carried it through
good times and bad--post-war revivals and the Great Depression--up until
the 1960s. By then, the train had been eclipsed by the automobile, and
the city's industrial and manufacturing base had dwindled to a fraction
of its former self, leaving behind a stream of contaminants that in 1969
earned Chattanooga the dubious honor of being the most polluted city in
the nation. The city acted quickly to clean up the environment, but it
continued to face economic woes, and with the onset of the Civil Rights
movement, racial tensions ran high. Since the early 1990s, however, there's
been a renaissance of sorts in Chattanooga, one that includes a revival
of the city's downtown area, an expansion of the service sector and efforts
have been made to bridge the gap between the city's black and white populations.
Against this backdrop, city and county leaders voted in 1996 to merge
the two school systems serving students in the city of Chattanooga and
surrounding Hamilton County, and Superintendent Jesse Register was lured
away from his job at the Iredell-Statesville schools in North Carolina
to run the new school district known as Hamilton County Schools. "They
were two 20,000-student school systems," he said, "one urban and high
poverty, the other suburban and middle class." One was also largely African
American and the other largely white, and Register inherited a pending
desegregation complaint from the U.S. Department of Education's Office
of Civil Rights demanding that he integrate the schools. Hence one of
his first reform efforts was the creation of a pupil assignment plan that
included the creation of 15 magnet schools aimed at drawing white and
black students across their traditional boundary lines. "It was either
that or busing," he said, "and [busing] didn't make sense with the landscape,
the rivers and the mountains."
Since then, Hamilton County school administrators have implemented several
initiatives to improve the quality of their schools and facilitate a merger
that still--nearly ten years later--encounters undercurrents of resistance.
"There are still people in this county," Register said, "who would like
to see it run the way it used to be." But he must contend with the reality
at hand, and to do that he's recently adopted a two-pronged approach.
One, he convinced the school board to implement a unified diploma, becoming
one of the few public school systems in the country to do away with a
more traditional three-tiered system that puts the college-bound kids
on one path, vocational kids on another and a third group of kids on a
track that's somewhere in-between. Beginning with last year's entering
freshman, all high school students in Chattanooga and its suburbs will
be prepared to enter college when they finish high school.
The second part of Register's most recent reform effort is a multimillion-dollar
overhaul of all seventeen high schools. So far the price tag is an estimated
$20 million, including $8 million from Carnegie Corporation's SNS initiative.
In Chattanooga, a key component of the SNS work is vocational education--a
term that harks back to the days of "home ec" and auto shop. Today, vocational
education is much more sophisticated and educators refer to it as career
and technology education, or CTE. "We had two vocational high schools,"
Register says, adding, "The biggest problem was that they were inaccessible,
and we didn't think we had a very good idea of what career and technology
education should look like." The two vocational schools were created in
the late 1960s, and they became dumping grounds for kids who struggled
with academics. They also removed students from what educator Valerie
Copeland Rutledge calls "all the regular parts of school." Rutledge taught
in Hamilton county schools for twenty years before she became director
of the Teacher Preparation Academy at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga,
and she saw firsthand how the vocational program used to work. "It created
a divide," she said. Voc ed students could not participate in the gamut
of school-wide activities that define the high school experience--student
body elections, pep rallies, etc. "When all of these things were going
on," she says, "they were at vocational school or on the bus going to
vocational school."
Register and his staff now have a much better sense of what career and
technology education should look like. It should take the form of a career
academy, meaning it should be a small school setting, and it should foster
a sense of belonging for students who might otherwise feel lost on a large
sprawling campus. The academy should offer classes in all core subject
areas as well as a range of career-oriented options, and it should have
strong ties to the business community, much like East Ridge does with
the AGC of East Tennessee. In addition, school administrators require
that each academy be designed to attract students who reflect the demographics
and academic achievement of the school as a whole to ensure that it doesn't
cater to a skewed number of students from any given race, ethnicity, or
any particular rung on the grading scale. Beyond these parameters, however,
it's up to the individual school to determine what kind of academy it
wants, how many it wants and the timetable for creating each one. East
Ridge is moving slowly and deliberately with two academies--one for ninth
graders and the Construction Academy. But Central High School opted for
a much faster track. It started with one ninth-grade academy in the 2003-2004
school year and added three more theme-based academies last year. For
the current school year, there will be a total of twenty-seven academies--including
seven ninth grade academies--at twelve of the county's seventeen high
schools.
Next page: Beyond Chattanooga
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