1 / 19

Career Pathways, 2+2+2: Traps & Barriers

Career Pathways, 2+2+2: Traps & Barriers. Jane Patton, Vice President Wheeler North, Curriculum Chair ASCCC. Where students have been; Where they will go. Curriculum does not exist in a vacuum depends on student prep & goals Faculty challenge: students’ level of preparation

xanthus-fox
Télécharger la présentation

Career Pathways, 2+2+2: Traps & Barriers

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 Pathways, 2+2+2: Traps & Barriers Jane Patton, Vice President Wheeler North, Curriculum Chair ASCCC Curriculum Institute 2008

  2. Where students have been; Where they will go • Curriculum does not exist in a vacuum • depends on student prep & goals • Faculty challenge: students’ level of preparation • Hence BSI and new grad. reqs (Math & English) • We articulate in 2 directions • With universities • With high schools and ROCPs Curriculum Institute 2008

  3. Curriculum helps/hinders progression • Describe students’ progression from high school: • Basic Skills • Occupational • Transfer-oriented • Compare the high school curriculum to college: • Honors • Occupational/ CTE (“Career Technical Education”) • Reading, math, English Curriculum Institute 2008

  4. Where are the traps or barriers? Curriculum Institute 2008

  5. What’s our role as faculty? • Ensuring students’ pathways • from secondary, to colleges, through colleges, to work or universities • Considering multiple student needs: • noncredit • basic skills • occupational • transfer • Considering the overall curriculum---the “big picture” Curriculum Institute 2008

  6. The Context of Curriculum ßInputß“Throughput” ßOutput Curriculum Institute 2008

  7. 2+2 2+2+2 Middle College Early College High School Concurrent /Dual Enrollment Tech Prep School-to-Career (federal name: STW) SB 70 (Scott) Various Secondary / Postsecondary Linkage Efforts

  8. Benefits to linking schools & colleges FOR THE H.S. STUDENTS • Clearer expectations • May not need to repeat • Feel connected to college • Motivation to graduate FOR THE COLLEGE/PROGRAMS • Recruitment • Better prepared students • Higher retention & completion rates • More motivated students Curriculum Institute 2008

  9. Project’s goal: To facilitate articulation between high schools, ROCPs and colleges

  10. Opportunities for CCC faculty to develop agreements with teachers • Database of agreements • Outreach to students, parents, staff • Goal: More transportability of articulation agreements Activities

  11. Sequence • Discipline groups develop articulation templates. • Templates disseminated for field input. • Once approved, added to new database. • Local articulation agreements written using templates • New articulation agreements put into database • Available statewide

  12. Status • 40 discipline groups convened • 90 templates drafted • Agreements being written to templates • Outreach & marketing begun (internal/external) • Regional articulation meetings held • Articulation Handbook developed • Tools for hosting articulation events

  13. Discipline groups so far. . . • Administration of Justice • Agricultural Business • Animation • Animal Science • Allied Health • Automotive Technology & Repair • Biological Science/ Biological Technology • Building Trades and Construction • Business/ Accounting/E commerce • Child Development • CISCO/ A+ • Computer Information Science (CIS) • Dental Assisting • Design Drafting • Engineering/Applied Technology • Fashion • Fire Science • Gaming • Geospatial Technologies (GIS/GPS) • Graphic Design • Health Occupations/CNA/ HHA • Hospitality/ Culinary Arts/Hotel • Interior Design • IT Applications • IT Web Design • Landscape Design • Logistics • Machining / CAM • Marketing • Medical Assisting • Office Technology • Ornamental Horticulture • Photography • Retail • Robotics • Sustainable Construction (Green Construction) • Video Production • Welding Go to www.statewidepathways.org for updates

  14. Next steps • Local & Regional articulation meetings • Populate database of agreements • More templates • Outreach: parents, students, staff & faculty • Collaboration with other projects & groups • Transcript issues • University articulation issues

  15. Your Role • Share project info. (occupational faculty) • Speak to Tech Prep Director & A.O. • Check websitewww.statewidepathways.org • Volunteer yourself and others • Help ensure your local processes give students credit they earned

  16. Resources • www.statewidepathways.org • Email: info@statewidepathways.org • Tech Prep Directors • Academic Senate (916) 445-4753

  17. Linking schools & colleges: Trends • Concurrent enrollment • Competency statements • Collaboratives • Besides CTE links, talks are starting RE: English, math, etc. Curriculum Institute 2008

  18. What’s the role for curriculum members? • Ensure COR and catalogs have correct designations • Work with Articulation Officer • Support discipline faculty as they participate in articulation agreements • Communicate with Tech Prep Director • Work with your academic senate in considering the the “big picture” of your curriculum: are courses a pathway or obstacle? Curriculum Institute 2008

  19. Marketing our Colleges Statewide marketing campaign: Academic Senate for California Community Colleges

More Related