1 / 39

Building a Construction Academy with Aloha

Building a Construction Academy with Aloha. Alan Lerchbacker Honolulu Community College Bonnie Rinard and Kristin Zastoupil CORD. Agenda. Description of Hawaii’s Labor Shortage Dream Construction Academy 8 High Schools 8 Goals DOL Grant Construction Academy becomes a reality.

fadey
Télécharger la présentation

Building a Construction Academy with Aloha

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. Building a Construction Academy with Aloha Alan Lerchbacker Honolulu Community College Bonnie Rinard and Kristin Zastoupil CORD

  2. Agenda • Description of Hawaii’s Labor Shortage • Dream Construction Academy • 8 High Schools • 8 Goals • DOL Grant • Construction Academy becomes a reality

  3. Construction Academy on KHON News

  4. Critical Issues • Service industry and DOD dominance • Preponderance of service jobs • Based on number of jobs 8 out of top 10 Hawaii jobs do not pay a living wage • Source Self-Sufficiency Standard for Hawaii April 2003 • Brain drain lack of career options • Current un-employment 2.6 % • Lost 100,000 people between 22 and 45 in the last five years • Labor Shortage • 7500 construction workers needed over the next seven years

  5. Labor Shortage in Hawaii • Rapid growth • Federal government • $4 billion projected construction spending for 2005 increasing over next 7-12 years • $475 million University of Hawaii improvements repair and maintenance • $300 million Department of Transportation capital improvements.

  6. Labor Shortage in Hawaii • 7,500 new construction workers projected over the next 7 years • Attrition • Hawaii will not be able to meet this demand given current educational and adult workforce development conditions

  7. Job Education Demand/Supply Gap2002

  8. What is the Construction Academy? • Partnership • Designed to teach multiple disciplines and skills • Reverse Hawaii’s labor shortage

  9. 8 high schools Radford Pearl City Waipahu Waialua McKinley Mililani Kailua Kahuku Current Schools

  10. GOALS The project has 8 goals: • Increase the number of high school students taking courses in building and construction (B&C) technologies; • Improve the basic skills of high school graduates and adult learners in areas related to careers in the B&C trades such as math, reading, and job readiness/ employability through an integrated, standards-based high school curriculum;

  11. GOALS • Create a standardized, rigorous B&C technology curriculum high school level with direct articulation to construction certificates and degree programs at the Community Colleges; • Provide dual-credit option; • Increase the number of high school graduates entering a career or postsecondary education in the B&C trades;

  12. GOALS • Provide teacher training and ongoing support for faculty at the high school and community colleges participating in the Construction Academy; • Increase native Hawaiian participation; • Expand curriculum and training to the adult learner population.

  13. President's High GrowthJob Training Initiative • Strategic effort to prepare workers to take advantage of new and increasing job opportunities. • The foundation is partnerships that include public workforce system, business and industry, education and training providers and economic development.

  14. DOL $1.4 Million 2 Year Grant • US DOL President’s High Growth Job Training Initiative • Address labor shortage in Hawaii • 8 major project goals • Educational challenges • Major curriculum challenges • Potential large scale outcomes

  15. Educational Challenges • Retention and completion rates • Standardized dual-credit curriculum • Motivating learners • Appropriate lab/shop facilities • Evaluating effectiveness • Drug awareness • Teacher recruitment

  16. CORD’s Curriculum Process • Obtained input and feedback from all “key players” (high schools, community college, business/industry, labor unions, Department of Education, and government officials). • Gathered related standards from such sources as the Hawaii’s state standards and applicable national skill, employability, and academic standards.

  17. CORD’s Curriculum Process (continued) • Determined other constraints. • Courses are eligible for dual-credit. • Various class schedules. • Available facilities.

  18. Courses • Building and Construction I (BCI) (2004) • Building and Construction II (BCII) • Carpentry (2005) • Blueprint Reading and Drafting (2005) • Safety (2006) • Electrical (2006)

  19. Curriculum Frameworks • Created curriculum frameworks or “egg crates.” • Created Curriculum Planning Guides. • Created Unit Plans with projects, activities, and assessment instruments.

  20. Curriculum Planning Guides • Features include: • Background explaining the economic need for a construction academy • Standards and outcomes • Unit plans • Resource materials • Projects and activities • Assessment instruments • Suggestions for student portfolios

  21. Professional Development • Professional development workshops for high school teachers • July 2004 (BCI) • July 2005 (BCII Carpentry and Blueprint) • July 2006 (BCII Safety and Electrical)

  22. Resources • Website • Purpose is to provide additional resources, community building between teaching, and an open forum for communication. • Platform: Blackboard to be converted to Web CT. • Math for Construction supplement

  23. Real Construction Academy • 8 High Schools • Multiple Classes • Motivated Students • Well planned and funded future projects

  24. Current Support • 2 traveling instructors • Chris Kuahine • Lambert Panui • Conducted student-interest interviews • Developing a sponsor program for each high school

  25. Radford • Instructor Henry Aulrio • 1 section of BCI with 26 students • 1 section of BCII Carpentry with 30 students • 1 section of CAD with 42 students • Past Projects • Guard shack • Picnic table and benches • Baseball dugout • Haunted house • Current Projects • Playhouse • Smokehouse • Soap box derby track

  26. Pearl City • Instructor Lester Aranaydo • 1 section of BCI with 15 students and BCII Carpentry with 6 students • Trying to start AutoCAD • Past Projects • Firing range (10x96 ft.) • Small playhouse • Current Projects • Playhouse

  27. Waipahu • Instructor Henry Aulrio • 2 sections of woodshop with 30 students (Tim In) • 1 section of metals with 30 students (Joe Whistler) • 1 section of electronics (Paul Hidamo) • 1 section of BCII BlueprintReading and Drafting using CAD with 32 students (Doug Sato) • Past Projects • Stainless steel Hibachis • Famous quotationsfinished signs • Electric car • Current Projects • Playhouse

  28. Waialua • Instructor Randall Erice • 1 section of BCI with 18 students • Past Projects • Large outside shelter • “Yikes Bikes” • Current Projects • Playhouse

  29. McKinley • Instructor Lisa Kaneshiro • 1 section of BCI with 20 students • 1 section of BCII Carpentry with 8 students • Past Projects • Ukeleles • Metal science project frames • Current Projects • Planter stands for Ag students • Maintenance garage for vehicles

  30. Mililani • Instructors Jeff Cadiz and Darrell Ota • 1 section of BCI with 23 students • 1 section of Drafting/CAD • Past Projects • Skateboards • Canoe paddles • Building extension for woodshop • Current Projects • Sanding room

  31. Kailua • Instructor Rodney Tabiola • 1 section of BCI with 20 students • Past Projects • Gazebo • Baseball equipment room • Current Projects • Playhouse

  32. Kahuku • Instructor Telefoni Aumua • 1 section of BCI/BCII with 33 students • Past Projects • Amphitheater • Rifle range • Current Projects • Playhouse • Form benches • Handicap access for football field

  33. Next Steps • Develop industry partnerships • Secure contributions • Create speaker’s bureau database • Create internships for faculty • Develop job site tours for students

  34. Next Steps • Create construction job fair geared towards potential students • Develop equipment and scholarship support • Expand on-campus support focus on special populations • Department of Human Services Candidates • Federal Parolees

  35. Outcomes • 500 students will take courses in the Construction Academy. • 300 students will enroll in construction apprenticeship programs, construction associate degree programs, or construction baccalaureate programs. • Share program state-wide and nationally USDOL, National Coalition of Advanced Technology Centers, Kauai CC, Hawaii CC, non-pilot HS’s, Corrections.

  36. Outcomes • Standards-based curriculum will be created to mesh with construction certificate and degree programs at community colleges. • Technical assistance guide for developing a career academy will be created to assist other areas interested in launching their own academies. • Create One-stop Shop as an extension of local Workforce Investment Board to train CC and HS counselors.

  37. Honolulu Community CollegeAlan Lerchbacker alan@hcc.hawaii.edu (808) 479-9887 (626) 644-6452 www.hcc.hawaii.edu CORD Bonnie Rinard brinard@cord.org (254) 772-8756 ext .262 Kristin Zastoupil kzastoupil@cord.org (254) 772-8756 ext .210 www.cord.org For more information about this project, contact:

  38. Questions? Mahalo! (Thank you!)

More Related