FutureWork:
Vocational Training Back In Vogue
Enrollment
in technical education soared by 57 percent - from 9.6 million students in 1999
to 15.1 million in 2004, the US Department of Education reported to Congress. There's
every indication that interest is continuing to rise, as families struggle ever
harder to afford the traditional college education and as demand grows for
skilled US
workers in fields such as aviation mechanics, computer technology, electronics,
global positioning, and trades ranging from culinary arts to construction.
"American
career technical education is being redefined because the needs of the evolving
US and world economies are changing," says Darrell Luzzo,
incoming president of the National Career Development Association.
"Educators at all levels are recognizing that the world's employers
increasingly need skill sets that the conventional four-year college degree
doesn't give." The once-standard offerings of technical education - wood
shop, metal shop, machining - don't cut it in today's economy either.
"We
are redefining almost everything that has to do with the intersection of new
technology and the global economy," says Mark Whitlock, CEO of Central
Educational Center in Newnan, Ga., a charter school. "The
economy is changing and therefore education has to continue to change."
Fields of study today are likely to include more forward-looking careers: crime
forensics, composite-plastic fuselage design, robotics, nanotechnology, radiological
diagnostics, 3-D animation, and the burgeoning field of "industrial
maintenance technology" (keeping the high-tech systems in a modern
industrial building up and running). "When a light-sensor toilet doesn't
function anymore, who ya gonna
call? Not a regular plumber," says Bill Murphy, recruiter for the McMurry Regional Training Center in Casper, Wyo. "You need someone who
knows how to program computers."
One
result of that quest for workplace relevance is a rise in partnerships among
community/technical colleges, high schools, and employers. A case in point is
the pairing of RF MicroDevices, RFMD, in Greensboro, N.C., with Guilford
Technical
Community College.
RFMD has developed several programs to help train student operators for his
"water fab" facilities, which turn out
integrated computer circuits. "There's no place else around here where
someone can learn the skills necessary to perform efficiently in our
facility," says Ralph Knupp of RFMD.
"Someone who graduates with a bachelor of arts would not arrive bringing
the specific experience we need. So vocational training is critical for us to
maintain our manufacturing strength in Greensboro."
North
Carolina, which has seen its
textile and furniture industries contract dramatically in the face of foreign competition,
has relied heavily on its community college system, founded in 1958, to
redevelop and retrain displaced workers. "We did a major study with
industry and found that for two-thirds of all bio-tech jobs in this state, no
four-year degree was necessary," says Martin Lancaster, president of the North Carolina
Community College
system.
In
California, meanwhile,
the renewed interest in tech-ed follows a 25-year
decline in such instruction. About three-quarters of high school technical
programs were dismantled, and the number of such high school courses dwindled
from 40,000 to 24,000 in that time.
But
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) supports targeted vocational education, based on
European models from his childhood. The governor is touring the state in
support of a November ballot proposition that will provide $10 billion in bond
money to overcrowded schools, including 170 community colleges. "The
renaissance of career technical training is absolutely confirmed in California," says Brice Harris, chancellor
of Los Rios Community College District in Sacramento.
Fall enrollment there is up 5,000 from last year, a 6 percent jump.
Companies
clamoring for specific skills are driving much of the tech-ed
rebirth, analysts say. "Industry has been complaining about shortages of
skilled labor they need, so they have been sharing that with college
administrations, counselors, and technical advisers," says Trent Munsey,
CEO of Skills USA California, a state and national organization that connects
students, educators, industries, and businesses. "They have been screaming
for trained people [coming] out of the school system as it is ... and enticing
people back to the trades."
The disconnect between employers and American education remains a serious
problem, say some observers. "America
still has way too many parents and students reflexively applying to four-year
colleges on the old adage that in the long run, that is how to get to the
top," says Peg Hendershot, director of Career
Vision, a Chicago-based career consulting service. More than 90 percent of US
high school seniors say they plan to attend college, and about 70 percent of
high school graduates actually do go to college within two years, according to
the Education Trust.
"Many
more have been going to college without really knowing why and finding out they
don't acquire the skills they need to get a job," says Ms. Hendershot. "Now the conversation has started over how
to create shorter, alternative pathways."
Source:Christian Science Monitor,Daniel B. Wood, 10/12/06