1 / 19

Career and Technical Education in Minnesota

Career and Technical Education in Minnesota. Presentation to the Governor’s Workforce Development Council March 13, 2008. Minnesota Perkins State Career and Technical Education Plan 2006 Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act.

dinah
Télécharger la présentation

Career and Technical Education in Minnesota

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Career and Technical Education in Minnesota Presentation to the Governor’s Workforce Development Council March 13, 2008 Minnesota Perkins State Career and Technical Education Plan 2006 Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act

  2. 2006 Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act • Purpose of 2006 Perkins Act (Perkins IV) • Perkins IV Directs • The Operation of Secondary, Postsecondary, and Adult • Career and Technical Education Programs for the Period from July 1, 2007 to June 30, 2013 • Perkins IV Requires • Career And Technical Education (CTE) to Have a Renewed and Strengthened Focus on Collaborative • Partnerships and the Development and Implementation of • Programs Spanning Secondary And Postsecondary Educationfor Students Wishing to Combine Academic and • Technical Preparation DRAFT

  3. The 21st Century Career and Technical Education Framework:The National Context The Intent of Perkins IV jointly addresses the three prominent national education and workforce development policy issues facing the United States in the 21st century DRAFT

  4. Minnesota’s New Direction for CTE Scope of the Perkins Act • Minnesota will receive approximately $20 million in FY08: of which 85% goes to system colleges and high schools, with 15% remaining at OOC and the Minnesota Department of Education • Of the 85% allocated to system colleges and high schools: 90% will be allocated using a formula based on CTE participation and poverty measures • 10% will be allocated using formula based on CTE participation and the geographical spread (in area) of a consortium • Of the 85% allocated to system colleges and high schools: • 58% will go to system colleges and 42% to high • schools DRAFT

  5. Minnesota’s New Direction for CTE Scope of the Perkins Act • While this is a relatively small investment when compared to education spending as a whole (the state’s K-12 education budget is about $15 billion, and the higher education budget is around $3 billion) • The federal investment (Perkins) does much to provide a direction for state and local expenditures on CTE • This makes the information in the State Plan critical for career and technical education to be successful in Minnesota DRAFT

  6. Minnesota’s New Direction for CTE State Plan Components • Planning, Coordination and Collaboration Prior to Plan Submission • Program Administration under a New Consortium Structure • Service to Special Populations • Accountability and Evaluation • Tech Prep Roll-in • Financial Provisions and Assurances • Appendices Draft State Plan available at www.perkinsplan.project.mnscu.edu DRAFT

  7. Minnesota’s new Direction for CTE What is New for Minnesota State CTE Plan Under Perkins IV • Established formal consortia of secondary and postsecondary partners to receive Perkins funds, jointly administering programs and support services for all secondary and post-secondary CTE students through a single joint local consortium plan. DRAFT

  8. Minnesota’s New Direction for CTE Program Administration under a New Consortium Structure Minnesota, then, is forwarding a structural change under Perkins IV that has established 26 local consortia of secondary school districts and two-year System colleges. DRAFT

  9. Minnesota’s new Direction for CTE What is New for Minnesota State CTE Plan Under Perkins IV • Each local consortium submits a local plan on May 8, 2008 to design, develop and implement programs of study/career pathways than span at least two years of high school and the first two years of post-secondary education to meet a new requirement under Perkins IV. DRAFT

  10. Minnesota’s New Direction for CTELocal Consortium Application Plan DRAFT

  11. Minnesota’s New Direction for CTEPrograms of Study This chart describes Minnesota’s Career Fields, Career Clusters and Career Pathways DRAFT

  12. Secondary Minnesota’s New Direction for CTEAccountability and Evaluation Post-Secondary • Academic Attainment – Reading/ Language Arts • Academic Attainment – Mathematics • Technical Skill Attainment • Secondary School Completion • Student Graduation Rates • Secondary Placement into Higher Ed, Military, or Employment • Nontraditional Gender-Based)Participation • Nontraditional (Gender-Based) • Completion • Technical Skill Attainment • CertificateDiploma, AAS, or • AS Completion • Student Retention or Transfer • Placement into Employment • Nontraditional (Gender-Based) • Participation • Nontraditional (Gender-Based) • Completion DRAFT

  13. Minnesota’s new Direction for CTE What is New for Minnesota State CTE Plan Under Perkins IV • The accountability provisions have more indicators, a greaterdegree of precision, andhigher reporting requirements than under Perkins III. Under Perkins IV the accountability provisions include requiring: • The development of separate technical skill attainment measures as part of the overall accountability requirements. • Measuring of secondary CTE performance using the No Child Left Behind accountability measures. • Post-Secondary CTE success measure has been expanded beyond just graduation to include retention and transfer • The negotiation between the each local consortia and the state on all accountability indicator targets and performance. DRAFT

  14. Minnesota’s new Direction for CTE What is New for Minnesota State CTE Plan Under Perkins IV • While ensuring the continued provision of programs and services to special populations, which has been the hallmark of the Perkins legislation, both at the state and local levels, consortia must address through their local plan: • The targeting of under-served and special populations, by advocating the use of the same strategies and measurement outcomes that apply to all other student populations, and, • Preparing non-traditional students for high-skill, high-wage, or high-demand employment in the region. DRAFT

  15. Policy Implications Resulting from Implementing the Minnesota Five-Year State Career and Technical Education Plan • Redirect how Minnesota designs its CTE programs to support programs of study/career pathways implementation. • Establish a differentiated system of accountability for all CTE programs that distinguishes between technical skill proficiency and conventional graduation outcomes, significantly affecting how learner outcomes are assessed in high school and college CTE programs. DRAFT

  16. Policy Implications Resulting from Implementing the Minnesota Five-Year State Career and Technical Education Plan • Strengthen secondary and postsecondary collaboration by requiring high schools and colleges to expend Perkins funds as a consortium of high schools and colleges who together will meet the intent of the Perkins Law through a single joint local plan. • Determine the process for allocating Perkins funds to high schools and colleges based on a rationale agreed to by the Chancellor of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities and the Commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Education. DRAFT

  17. Policy Implications Resulting from Implementing the Minnesota Five-Year State Career and Technical Education Plan • Explore coordinated data systems that allow for a wider array of accountability measures as students move directly from high school to college, in and out of education, and transition between education and employment. • Require that dual enrollment and articulation strategies be addressed as consortia are implementing programs of study/career pathways. DRAFT

  18. Policy Implications Resulting from Implementing the Minnesota Five-Year State Career and Technical Education Plan • Support the goal of improving college readiness by identifying the high school academic and CTE courses that are preparatory to college programs as an integral part of implementing programs of study/career pathways. • Target Perkins funds to complement state and other federal programs that focus primarily on student support services to the underserved student, including those classified as special populations. DRAFT

  19. Minnesota’s New Direction for CTELooking Towards Implementation When put into practice, the Minnesota Five-Year State CTE Plan will make one thing clear, CTE in Minnesota will reinforce what was already begun under the last State Plan: The expectation of developing efficient systems, policies, processes and procedures that increasingly intertwine learning with work; and, where increasing achievement, greater opportunities, and varied options are not just choices but are objectively- determined outcomes that will first and foremost benefit all students DRAFT

More Related