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Website Mission

It is the mission of this website to assist in the development of learning environments that promote Career and Technical Education as well as academic excellence. To provide examples of effective 21st century teaching and learning strategies in order to assist in the development of more engaged and motivated classrooms. To provide multimedia Podcasts and articles to facilitate an understanding of how to implement technology and multimedia in classrooms regardless of content area. To encourage independent and personalized learning by teaching students to enjoy the process of learning. To assist teachers in becoming facilitators of learning.

Career & Technical Education

Unfortunately, the public perception of Career and Technical Education (CTE) today is primarily negative because people are misinformed. Most believe that CTE is only beneficial for students that are academically challenged and are not college-bound. However, it is the goal of this website to change that perception by educating others about the long-term positive effects that CTE has on students, including providing students with both the academic and technical skills to pursue a variety of options after graduation. This section provides information on the current status of CTE, as well as recent news and updates in the field.

Common State Standards for CTE

Common state standards are nothing new to the field of education, but until recently one area did not have a set of standards to call their own: Career and Technical Education. With guidance from the National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium, or NASDCTEc, the standards were created as the result of input from people working in education and business throughout 42 states.

Useless College Degrees?

I recently received a link to a slide show gallery from The Daily Beast, an aggregator news website affiliated with Newsweek. The title of this gallery was “20 Most Useless Degrees” and No. 1 was Journalism, No 4 was Advertising, No. 14 was Photography, and No. 16 was Art.  The gallery does not explain why they are the most useless degrees, but you can draw conclusions based on the statistics that were provided for each occupation.

PA Programs of Study

The intent of the Programs of Study (POS) is to align academic and career and technical standards to postsecondary education institutions. By combining academic rigors, career education, and work standards, students will be be prepared for both postsecondary education and the workplace. The development and implementation of the POS is funded by the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Improvement Act of 2006. Specifically, the purpose of Perkins is to provide individuals with the academic and technical skills needed to succeed in a knowledge- and skills-based economy (http://www.acteonline.org/perkins.aspx#background).

POS Implementation

Published by the National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium (NASDCTEc), this brief update highlights the states’ progress in implementing programs of study (POS) within the Career Clusters framework, a key part of the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Act of 2006.

Career Clusters and Programs of Study: State of the States (April 2011)

HPO in PA

The High Priority Occupations (HPO) as defined by Chapter 339 and High Priority Occupations policy, is "an occupation as defined by the Center for Workforce Information and Analysis within the Department of Labor and Industry, or another occupation determined to meet regional workforce needs as documented through collaboration between the school entity or Technical Institute and one or more employers and approved by the Department."

CTE in Pennsylvania

According to the Pennsylvania Department of Education, the purpose of Career and Technical Education (CTE) “is to provide individuals with opportunities throughout their lifetimes to develop, in conjunction with other education and training programs, the knowledge and skills needed to keep Pennsylvania’s workforce competitive.”

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