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Improving The Image of Career & Technical Education G. James Pinchak, Ph.D. Ohio ACTE Conference

Improving The Image of Career & Technical Education G. James Pinchak, Ph.D. Ohio ACTE Conference July 30, 2014. Today’s Message Congratulations! You are part of something great! You are part of something needed. 4. You must market your program to students and families to survive.

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Improving The Image of Career & Technical Education G. James Pinchak, Ph.D. Ohio ACTE Conference

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  1. Improving The Image of Career & Technical Education • G. James Pinchak, Ph.D. • Ohio ACTE Conference • July 30, 2014

  2. Today’s Message • Congratulations! • You are part of something great! • You are part of something needed. • 4. You must market your program to students and families to survive. • 5. You can not do this alone, you must network with others.

  3. The Good News! • The needs of our students, the concepts we teach, the instructional strategies we apply and services we provide have never been more widely accepted.

  4. The Bad News: • Confusion about who we are, what we do and why we do it also has never been greater.

  5. In the past two years I have visited sixteen countries and everyone I met wants the same things.

  6. Economic security and opportunities for themselves and their families • A home, a car and a better life for their children • 3 . A happy life doing the things that they enjoy. • And they understand that a quality education is essential to achieving these goals.

  7. What they don’t want in their children’s education: • The stigma of a “special student” • An educational program that prevents their children from going to college • An educational program that leads to a dead end career in a low paying job • A program that limits the child’s contact with other students.

  8. They understand that each year society provides fewer and fewer good paying jobs for students who do not have a rigorous education and technical skills for the workplace.

  9. They do want an education that inspires students to learn, grow and be better than they are!

  10. In China teachers call parents and complain when students do not learn……………. • In the US parents call teachers and complain when students do not learn! • Changes in the US:

  11. You must communicate regularly with students and their families

  12. The Elective Dilemna • Except in a few rare situations, Career & Technical Education Courses are Elective Courses. • No one is mandated to take them!

  13. The Elective Dilemma • No school is required to offer any specific CTE course! • We are in a free market economy and you must market your program or you will not have a job!

  14. The Best Electives • 1. Help build the students GPA • 2. Are challenging but fun • 3. Don’t require a great deal of homework • 4. Offer college credit • 5. Have attractive facilities and classrooms • 6. Offer credentials and build resumes

  15. . • Not Just College and Careers

  16. . • We Must Dig Deeper • And Make Stronger Connections!

  17. . • Occupations and Majors Matter!

  18. Evolving Concepts: • 1990’s • School-To-Work Transitions • 2000’s • Preparation for Careers and College • 2010’s • Preparation for Occupations and Majors

  19. To select the best CTE electives, students have to leave some of their friends behind. Snoop Dogg says, “If you ain’t losing friends, you ain’t growing up.”

  20. Growing Awareness of Wellness

  21. Ohio State University Student Wellness Center 2014 • Nine Dimensions of Wellness • Emotional WellnessThe emotionally well person can identify, express, and manage the entire range of feelings and would consider seeking assistance to address areas of concern. • Career WellnessThe professionally well person engages in work to gain personal satisfaction and enrichment, consistent with values, goals, and lifestyle. • Social WellnessThe socially well person has a network of support based on interdependence, mutual trust, respect and has developed a sensitivity and awareness towards the feelings of others. • Spiritual WellnessThe spiritually well person seeks harmony and balance by openly exploring the depth of human purpose, meaning, and connection through dialogue and self-reflection. • Physical WellnessThe physically well person gets an adequate amount of sleep, eats a balanced and nutritious diet, engages in exercise for 150 minutes per week, attends regular medical check-ups, and practices safe and healthy sexual relations. • Financial WellnessThe financially well person is fully aware of financial state and budgets, saves, and manages finances in order to achieve realistic goals. • Intellectual WellnessThe intellectually well person values lifelong learning and seeks to foster critical thinking, develop moral reasoning, expand worldviews, and engage in education for the pursuit of knowledge. • Creative WellnessThe creatively well person values and actively participates in a diverse range of arts and cultural experiences as a means to understand and appreciate the surrounding world. • Environmental WellnessThe environmentally well person recognizes the responsibility to preserve, protect, and improve the environment and appreciates the interconnectedness of nature and the individual.

  22. The CTE Curriculum Needs to Address Wellness • “Those who do climb the ladder, against the odds, often pay a little-known price: Success at school and in the workplace can exact a toll on the body that may have long-term repercussions for health.” • (Miller, Chen & Brody)

  23. New National Awareness of the Need for All Types of Wellness and Avoidance of Risky Behaviors

  24. Like it or not CTE is still the best hope graduation for students in the bottom half of the bell curve.

  25. New National Report Released April 2014 Houston We Still Have a Problem!

  26. “For the first time in U.S. history the nation’s high school graduation rate rose above 80 percent” • 2014 Building a GradNation: Progress and Challenge in Ending the High School Dropout Epidemic report released April 28 by Civic Enterprises

  27. Ohio Graduation Rates 2012: • White 86% • Hispanic 68% • Black 61% • Econ. Disad. 68% • SWD 61%

  28. Ohio Graduation Rates 2012 Overall 81% Low Income 68% Non-Low Income 89% Percentage of Low Income Students 37%

  29. High School Graduation Rates

  30. Resilient Children

  31. Educational reform moves like a “Slinky Dog Toy”

  32. After years of educational reform addressing the needs of the top half, attention is returning the students at the bottom.

  33. The front moves immediately than the middle sags. • Finally energy and attention in focused on the back half.

  34. We must offer students in school opportunities for success in life upward mobility

  35. … And avoid the costs of Social Isolation

  36. . • Goodhart’s Law: • When a measure becomes a goal, it ceases to be a good measure.

  37. Stand up if you tutored a student to pass the OGT

  38. Stand up if you intervened with a student who wanted to commit suicide?

  39. Stand up if you intervened to help students select a career path where they are successful?

  40. Stand up if you had a student come and thank you for changing his/ her life?

  41. Be Positive, Be Positive, Be Positive

  42. CTE Changes Lives!

  43. What Are You Waiting For?

  44. Warning Danger Will Robinson! We are not our students friends and we not their parents! “Conduct Unbecoming the Profession” Is Always a Danger!

  45. G. James Pinchak, Ph.D. LPC Senior LecturerWorkforce Development & EducationCollege of Education & Human EcologyThe Ohio State University • Room A466, PAES Building305 West 17th Ave.Columbus, OH 43210-1224Mobile: 614.270.2547Email: Pinchak.1@osu.edu

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