Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE....

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Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F

Transcript of Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE....

Page 1: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

Career & Technical Education(CTE)

Group F

Page 2: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

CTE in USA

What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities related to

CTE.

Page 3: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

What is CTE?

Career and Technical Education (CTE) or Vocational Education is described as education that prepares both youth and adults for a wide range of careers. These careers may require varying levels of education—from high school and post-secondary certificates to two- and four-year college degrees.

Page 4: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

What is CTE?

The U.S. Department of Education has named career and technical education programs to its "New American High Schools" list and the Office of Vocational and Adult Education also has recognized programs with awards.

The Kentucky Department of Education (2010) provides as a good example of a mission of Career and Technical Education: CTE is to assist schools in providing students with skills necessary for a successful transition to post-secondary education or work and a desire for life-long learning in a global society.

Page 5: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

History CTE became popular in Europe after the Industrial

Revolution by the decline of handwork force. This situation resulted in the need of manual training,

involving general instruction in the use of hand tools. This concept of Education was developed initially in Scandinavia (c.1866).

It became popular in the elementary schools of the United States after 1880.

Major Progress was made by the armed services during World War II.

Page 6: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

History

In recent years, many of the public high schools offer vocational training with a lot of programs designed according to the needs.

There are still a lot of traditional programs. However, many schools have shifted the emphasis of their programs from the traditional construction trades to computers and related technologies, and some schools have moved away from vocational training entirely.

Page 7: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

Areas covered by CTE.

Agriculture Trade & Business and Family &Industrial Marketing Consumer

Sciences Sciences

* Farmers * Automotive * Entrepreneurs * Management & * Animal scientists * Technicians * Financial officers life skills* Turf grass * Carpenters * Arts/graphics * Executive chefs specialists * Electricians designers * Hotel managers

Health Public Safety TechnologyOccupations & Security

* Nurses, * 3D animator* Physical therapists, * Computer engineer* Biomedical engineers * Response

coordinators

* EMTs* Emergency Mngt

* Biotechnical engineer

Page 8: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

Where and How CTE is offered

CTE is offered in middle schools, high schools, two-year community and technical colleges and other post-secondary institutions.

Public middle schools in the United States typically offer some career and technical education courses, such as family and consumer sciences and technology education (a modular sequence of courses that enables students to explore a variety of technology-based careers).

Page 9: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

Where and How CTE is offered

High school programs are offered either within a "comprehensive" high school or in separate "area career and technical schools."

In some states, such as Delaware, both academic and technical courses are offered in full-time career and technical high schools.

Usually career and technical programs are offered as a sequence of courses that are supplemented by work-based experiences, such as internships or apprenticeships.

Page 10: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

Numbers, funding and opportunities related to CTE.

There are over 15 million secondary and post-secondary career and technical education students in the United States (Education Statistics, 2002) .

The program is applied in 11,000 comprehensive high schools, several hundred career and technical high schools and about 1,400 area career tech centers, which serve students from several "sending" high schools.

About 9,400 post-secondary institutions offer technical programs, including community colleges, technical institutes, skill centers and other public and private two- and four-year colleges.

Page 11: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

Numbers, funding and opportunities related to CTE.

Programs receive about $1.3 billion annually from the federal government through the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act.

That represents about 8-10 percent of budgets for these programs, which receive most of their funding from local and state revenue.

Other laws, such as the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the Higher Education Act and the Workforce Investment Act, also fund programs.

Page 12: Career & Technical Education (CTE) Group F. CTE in USA What is CTE? History. Areas covered by CTE. Where and How CTE is offered Numbers, funding and opportunities.

Sources

http://www.acteonline.org/content.aspx?id=3654 - what_is_cte

http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Career+and+Technical+Education

http://www.education.ky.gov/KDE/Instructional+Resources/Career+and+Technical+Education/