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Career and Technology Education: It's Not Just "Vocational Education" Anymore
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Beyond Chattanooga
The academy concept is part of a new trend in vocational education, one
that responds to the demand for higher academic standards and the changing
needs of a modern-day workforce. And it is similar in some ways to the
trend that initially brought vocational education into the classroom at
the turn of the 20th century, when there were widespread concerns that
America's youth was not prepared for the Industrial Revolution. At the
time, apprenticeships were the norm and schools focused on the teaching
of academic subjects and moral and civic values. "Learning the technical
skills of a particular occupation still occurred on the job, not in the
classroom," write Norton Grubb and Marvin Lazerson in their 2004 book,
The Education Gospel (Harvard University Press, 2004). That began to change,
the authors say, with the convergence of three key developments: a precipitous
drop in the youth labor movement, the declining use of apprenticeships
and the Industrial Revolution itself. By mid-century, vocational education
had become a crucial component of the comprehensive American high school.
In fact, the authors note, "It created the comprehensive high school,"
which, in the years following World War II, was "the citadel of American
democracy, defending the American way of life and expressing the triumph
of education."
But in recent years, "the high school has lost its luster," argue Grubb
and Lazerson, and vocational education has been losing ground to the push
for higher standards, which began in 1983 when the National Commission
on Excellence in Education released the report A Nation at Risk. The report
famously warned that deteriorating standards were leading to a "rising
tide of mediocrity" in American education, and ever since, policymakers
have made academic standards a top priority. In their effort to help young
Americans become more successful students who are better prepared to participate
in an increasingly knowledge-based economy, politicians and educators
have implemented the use of accountability measures and standardized tests,
initially on a piecemeal basis and later, with the No Child Left Behind
Act of 2001, as nationwide policy. But critics like Grubb and Lazerson
say that crucial aspects of a high school education--including vocational
education--have been overlooked by the dual strategies of testing and
accountability.
Some efforts to upgrade vocational education were far enough along that
they simply adapted to the onset of standards-based reform, says Betsy
Brand, director of the Washington, DC-based Youth Policy Forum. While
educators focused almost exclusively on language and math, however, many
vocational education programs floundered. "There are only so many hours
in the day," Brand explains. "But people have kind of gotten over this
big hump of standards," she notes. "We realize we have to change instruction,
because that's what it really comes down to, and we could use a lot of
the approaches of CTE to improve instruction and to make it more relevant
and meaningful to kids." In short, educators are beginning to see how
vocational education can help--not hinder--their efforts to improve test
scores and graduation rates. Brand calls it a "reemergence." Gene Bottoms
of the Southern Regional Education Board (SREB), calls it an "awakening."
Either way, it's a renewed effort--at least in some places--to make vocational
education a key component of high school reform.
"Quality CTE can play a major role for some youngsters," Bottoms says.
"It can help them see the reason for taking more demanding academics.
It gives them a way to see a goal through high school. And, increasingly,
it's a way to link together high school and postsecondary studies." Bottoms
is the director of a high school reform program called High Schools That
Work (HSTW), a SREB initiative. Launched in 1987, it urges high schools
to follow 10 key principles, including a commitment to vocational education
and high academic standards. It also calls on teachers and administrators
to keep score--not only by analyzing student performance data, but also
by way of extensive teacher and student surveys. "One of the important
things about the HSTW model," says Betty Jordan of the West Virginia Department
of Education, "is that it encourages folks to use multiple sources of
data to make decisions." The student survey alone asks--among other things--about
the kinds of courses students are taking, how much reading is involved,
if they stand in front of class to make presentations and if vocational
teachers incorporate math skills in their lesson plans. West Virginia
adopted the SREB format as its official blueprint for high school reform
in the mid 1990s, and ever since there's been a gradual improvement in
test scores and graduation rates. "We're really making an impact on school
culture," Jordan says.
High Schools That Work is one of several models that have evolved in the
past ten-to-twenty years to upgrade vocational education for a 21st century
society. Career academies, much like the ones in Chattanooga, are another.
And a third is known as pathways. The pathways approach, which is not
affiliated with any particular organization, calls on students to follow
a career path--or a major--while they're in high school. In Oregon, where
pathways are used extensively throughout the state, the process begins
in the freshman and sophomore years. That's when "rich career information
is given to students so they can get a handle on the idea that some day
'I might have to work,'" says Jim Schoelkopf of the Oregon Department
of Education. At the end of their sophomore year, students select a career
major to pursue for the next two years. They may pick from six career
areas (such as Arts and Communications or Business and Management), and
the goal is to provide students with enough information and enough firsthand
experience to help them make wise decisions when they graduate. "They
may find they don't want to do something" Schoelkopf said, "and that's
learning. Let's give them an early exposure, but not track them."
Regardless of the approach--be it High Schools That Work, career academies
or pathways--there are two common themes in this new form of career and
technology education. One is an emphasis on academic standards and the
other is a much broader definition of vocation, one that includes a vast
array of courses that teach kids how to become nurses, doctors, architects,
builders, teachers, dentists, marketing executives and veterinarians.
Vocational education--in many places--no longer caters to students at
the bottom end of the education spectrum, says Constancia Warren, senior
program officer and director of Carnegie Corporation's Urban High School
Initiatives. In these places, it has become an option for all students.
"This is for a broader range of kids than most people think," Warren said.
"And it's important that it be for a broader range of kids. Some very
bright students cannot connect to more traditional instruction and some
supposedly not-very-bright students may discover new talents and a sense
of purpose in these schools."
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