10. “If the U.S. is to maintain its economic
leadership and compete in the new global
economy, the nation must prepare today’s K-
12 students better to be tomorrow’s
productive workers and citizens. Changing
workforce requirements mean that new
workers will need ever more sophisticated
skills in science, mathematics, engineering
and technology ...
http://www.nsf.gov/nsb/documents/2006/0502/testimony.pdf
11. Samuel Palmisano (CEO, IBM): Business Week: 10.11.2004
100 million jobs are going to
be created in a lot of these
cross-disciplinary fields
Council on Competitiveness:
National Innovation Initiative
12. Nanotechnology Fuel Cells Homeland Security
ADM, Hybrid, MEMS,
Computer Forensics Wireless: M2M Mechatronics
Home Technology
IntegrationBiotechnology
Digital Games
Forecasting.tstc.edu
13. Samuel Palmisano (CEO, IBM): Business Week: 10.11.2004
100 million jobs are going to
be created in a lot of these
cross-disciplinary fields
Council on Competitiveness:
National Innovation Initiative
14. Adapted from Charles Ostman
Senior Fellow
Institute for Global Futures
NEURO CHEM
BIOINFO
21st Century Architecture
15. Adapted from Charles Ostman
Senior Fellow
Institute for Global Futures
NEURO CHEM
BIOINFO
SET Convergence
16. Adapted from Charles Ostman
Senior Fellow
Institute for Global Futures
Arts &
Humanities
Science,
Eng.
& Tech
LawBusiness
STEM Impact
Education
17. STEM is horizontal in terms
of career clusters, academics
disciplines, civil society, civil
discourse and economic
prosperity.
18. STEM is horizontal in terms
of career clusters, academics
disciplines, civil society, civil
discourse and economic
prosperity.
20. ―There are kids on Maui
who have never been to
the top of the mountain or
to Hana much less have
they traveled off of the
island.‖
http://www.flickr.com/photos/fotographis/528878003/sizes/o/
When I say Maui, do you
think science and technology
or innovation?
21. ―I do not think Maui is any
different than the
mainland…post
industrialization has
placed greater demands
on math and education.‖
–Rose Yamada, elder
43. “If you were present when the
Oklahoma land grant colleges were
formed in the 1800s and you
visited the university campuses
today, you would not see much
change in the structure of learning
and the classroom.”
--President Hargis, Oklahoma State University
47. In the early 20th century, deplorable
working conditions, child labor
abuses, and lack of wage protection
were just some of the issues that
prompted the creation of the U.S.
Department of Labor. In
1913, Congress created the Department
as an agency dedicated to
foster, promote, and develop the
welfare of the American worker. This
marked the culmination of nearly half a
century of public demand for an agency
that would be devoted exclusively to
the welfare of American workers. The
Department has been dedicated to
helping workers adapt to the ever-
changing conditions of the economy
and the work place.
http://www.dol.gov/oasam/doljobs/aboutdol.htm
50. In 1956, Benjamin Bloom
headed a group of
educational psychologists
who developed a
classification of levels of
intellectual behavior
important in learning.
Bloom found that over
95% of the test questions
students encounter
require them to think only
at the lowest possible
level...the recall of
information.
Blooms
Taxonomy
Verb
51. Unskilled
60%
Skilled
20%
Prof.
20%
51
US Workforce by Education Level
Source: Career Pathways: Education with a
Purpose, p. 35
Unskilled
15%
Skilled
65%
Prof.
20%
Source: Achieve Texas: Lifelong Success for All
Students, p. 3
1950 2004
59. ―In 2006, demand was off the charts.
Every graduate had a job 6 months
before graduation. Chemical
Technology Graduates typically start
at $35K and it is not uncommon for
them to make $60K-to-$70K per year.‖
–Robert Hernandez, TSTC
60. Indian River State
College Current and
Emerging Pattern
Languages
Entrepreneurship, Innovation & Leadership
Humanities-Law-Human Development
Engineering-Design-*C.S.
Medical-Bio-Life Sciences
Architecture, Media & Arts
Entrepreneurship, Innovation & Leadership
FLOW: A Pattern for Play,
Learning, Cooperation and
Invention
*C.S. - Computer science
Faculty
Students
World
Community
61.
62. How is the structure of
learning different in
CTE than in traditional
academics?
63. Andragogy consists of
learning strategies focused
on adults.
Pedagogy consists of
learning strategies focused
on children.
64. Knowles' theory can be stated with six
assumptions of adult learning:
1. Adults need to know the reason for learning
something (Need to Know)
2. Experience (including error) provides the
basis for learning activities (Foundation).
3. Adults need to be responsible for their
decisions on education; involvement in the
planning and evaluation of their instruction
(Self-concept).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andragogy
65. Knowles' theory can be stated with six
assumptions of adult learning:
1. CTE students need to know the reason for
learning something (Need to Know)
2. For CTE Students experience (including error)
provides the basis for learning activities
(Foundation).
3. CTE students are responsible for their decisions
on education and involved in the planning and
evaluation of their instruction (Self-concept).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andragogy
66. Knowles' theory can be stated with six
assumptions of adult learning:
4. CTE students are most interested in learning
subjects having immediate relevance to their
work and/or personal lives (Readiness).
5. CTE learning is problem-centered rather than
content-oriented (Orientation).
6. CTE students respond better to internal versus
external motivators (Motivation).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andragogy
80. In 1956, Benjamin Bloom
headed a group of
educational psychologists
who developed a
classification of levels of
intellectual behavior
important in learning.
Bloom found that over
95% of the test questions
students encounter
require them to think only
at the lowest possible
level...the recall of
information.
Blooms
Taxonomy
Verb
91. Analytical Integrated
Mathematics (AIM)
Target Texas 4x4 – 4th Year of Math
Unify General Academics and CTE
Connect rigor and relevance
High motivation-TEAMS-Competition
Base for industry support in schools
Moving robotics from 10% penetration to 80% in 5 years
119. Lower Rio Grande Valley
o College transition rates, all
students: 56.7%
o College transition rates,
Tech Prep (2005 cohort):
65.7%
State of Texas
o College transition rates, all
students: 55.3%
o College transition rates
(2005 cohort): Tech Prep:
55.6%
Source: High School College Linkages, THECB Fall 2006 Preliminary
Enrollment, (2005-2006 Data), in Patricia G. (Pat) Bubb
18% Increase in College Attendance
125. “Growing evidence shows that [career]
pathways hold promise for reducing high
school dropout rates, increasing academic
achievement and learning, and increasing
students’ earning power when they
graduate. Equally compelling, studies
show that students enrolled in [career]
pathways perform as well as their
traditionally educated counterparts on key
measures.”
http://www.connectedcalifornia.org/advance_copy/policy_paper.pdf
126. “Those who complete both a
strong academic curriculum and a
vocational program of study (dual
concentrators) may have better
outcomes than those who pursue
one or the other (Silverberg, Warner, Fong, &
Goodwin, 2004; Plank, 2001; Stone & Aliaga, 2003)” (National
Alliance for Secondary Education and Transition, 2005, Career
Preparatory Experiences, ¶ 3).
134. TEAMS
Integrate all three houses of
US Education –
Collaboration is the key to
US competitiveness and
Innovation
135. TEAMS Model Schools
Systems of Systems
• High degree of faculty interaction across disciplines and
grades (systems)
• Integrating CTE, Arts and Academics (systems)
• Learning laboratories and worldly experience with industry-
standard tools, processes and problems (systems)
• Emerging P-20 systems (P-20) -- Sequenced, integrated and
transferable courses HS to CTC to University (systems)
• Transdisciplinary culture (systems) Context and frame for
learning is real world, purpose driven and action oriented.
136. Parasol II – 3:30 – 4:30
Pandora’s Xbox: Next
Generation e-learning and
the Case for STEM-IT-
Arts
142. PRIUS+ team: we built the first PRIUS+ conversion Sept 11-22, 2004, starting with a low-cost
lead-acid battery pack. Pictured are (L-R) Ron Gremban, Felix Kramer, Marc Geller, Kevin Lyons, Andrew Lawton.
See About CalCars for names of those who helped but are not pictured.
151. “We live in academic silos. The
world does not work that way.
If we work on
GREEN, sustainability, we
have to engage educational
practitioners from across
disciplines.”
President Hargis, Oklahoma State University
154. “Turbine Techs earn
$28-$40K a year…
Many techs earning
$40K - $80K a year with
OT.”
– Bryan Gregory, Jr.
11.1.2006, TSTC West TX, Sweetwater
155. ―In most industries
you have
electricians, mechanic
s and IT, in wind, you
are expected to do
everything.‖
-- Bryan Gregory, Jr.
11.1.2006, TSTC West TX, Sweetwater
159. Butler Community College
April 7 to 11, 2008
Frontier El Dorado
Refining Company
Operator
$40K - $60K
Instrumentation
$40K - $60K
Machinist
$40K - $60K
--Bill Kloeblen, Manager
Human Resources
160. 4.16.2007, TSTC Waco
“….we had to
upgrade our basic
mechanic skills to
include
programmable
logic controllers
and electrical
systems.”--Dr. Ron
Lentsch, Allergan
163. CTE is for students who cannot cut it in
the academic classroom…
CTE is for remedial students
CTE’s application--learning by doing
approach—is less rigorous than
academic learning.
CTE is for those children—not my child.