“welcome to cte”...october 10th new cte instructor webinar agenda 1. welcome - new cte...
TRANSCRIPT
New or Recently New
CTE Instructors:
“Welcome to CTE”
Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act – Perkins V
Presenters
• Shelli SowlesCTE Coordinator, Minnesota Department of Education
• Callon SiebenahlerBusiness Marketing Teacher, Shakopee High School
• Lindsey BrockbergAgriculture Education Teacher, Mountain Lake High School
• Tom LeuthnerPine To Prairie Cooperative Director, and Perkins Coordinator
October 10th
New CTE Instructor Webinar
Agenda
1. Welcome - New CTE Instructor Initiative
– Shelli Sowles, MDE
2. CTE in Minnesota
– What We Teach – Shelli Sowles
– History of CTE – Shelli Sowles
– CTE Today – Callon Siebenahler
3. Your First Year(s) as a CTE Instructor in Minnesota
– Your First Year Experience - Tom Leuthner
– How Students Learn – Lindsey Brockberg
– Tools for Your Toolbox – Lindsey Brockberg
Your First Year as a Career
and Technical Education
Instructor in MN
WHY WE TEACH CTE
in Today’s Schools & Colleges
• Share your occupational experience – its knowledge
and skills - with students
• Give back to your technical profession and community
by teaching
• Make a difference or impact on future generations
• View teaching as a highly regarded profession
• Remember an influential teacher that you respected
and appreciated
The Outcomes?
CTE Students:
• Gain relevant academic, technical, and employability
skills that prepare them for today’s workforce.
• Feel a sense of accomplishment and pride in their
work.
• Become actively engaged in their learning through
authentic, project-based experiences.
CTE: Its Past & Evolution
• Late 1800’s – Schools specialized in preparing workers for
certain jobs.
• Early 1900’s -1920’s – Agriculture schools opened; CTE
expanded to adult education & retraining citizens to re-enter for
the workforce.
• After WWII – Value of technical skills increased.
• 1960’s & 1970’s – Federal funding to enhance “vocational
education”
• 1980’s & 1990’s – Is CTE about the preparation for work? OR
does it provide a concrete, understandable context for learning &
applying academic skills? The result was the Carl Perkins Act of
1990.
CTE: Its Past & Evolution
1960-70’s
7 categories of Vocational Education
Teachers
* Agricultural education
* Business education
* Distributive education
• Health education
* Family and consumer science
* Technical education
• Trade and industry
Strengthening Career and
Technical Education for the 21st
Century Act
Focus Areas of “Perkins V”
• Building on Current Success
• Data-driven Decision-making
• Increasing Stakeholder Involvement
• Encouraging Innovation
• Recruiting and Retaining CTE Teachers
•http://www.cte.mnscu.edu
• Minnesota’s Direction – Programs of Study
Career
Pathways
Career Field
Career Cluster
Foundation Knowledge and
Skills
Today’s CTE Works!
Content of a CTE Program
Or Course
Academic skills – Need to know –concepts, theories, habits of mind Foundational skills– Need to understand – apply theory to a problem – critical thinking, problem solving, communications, teamwork, leadership, ethics, etc.Technical skills – Be able to do – hands-on skills and techniques to complete tasks, create, repair, etc.
Today’s CTE Works!
Career and College Readiness
Through Career Pathways
Programs of Study – Sequence of courses (high school to college) in a Career pathway
Today’s CTE’s Works!
CTE Student Organizations
BPA – Business DECA– Marketing, Management, & EntrepreneurshipFFA – AgricultureFCCLA – Family, Community, & Career Leaders of America/ Service OccupationsHOSA – Healthcare SkillsUSA –Trade & Industry
Your First Year
as a CTE Instructor
Ellen Moir, University of California – Santa Cruz
Your First Year
as a CTE Instructor
TOP 5 CONCERNS OF NEW TEACHERS Classroom/ Lab Arrangement & Management Curriculum Planning & Pacing Establishing a Grading System That is Fair Parent Conferences/ Student Advising Personal
Your First Year
as a CTE Instructor
How Students Learn
Consider how your students learn – What are their strengths?
What are their learning styles? How can they share their
learning with others in the class or community?
Use a variety of instructional strategies for the variety of
student learning in your class. . . individual assignments,
group projects, written documents, oral presentations are all
different methods for student learning.
Student projects should include planning, designing, piloting,
implementing , revising, and reporting their accomplishments.
Use your community as a resource for learning.
Student work should be assessed with regular feedback from
you and others. Personal student evaluation is also important
so they can reflect on their work and progress.
Tools for Your Toolbox
Planning a course. . .
Gather information about career pathways or careers related to
the course.
Identify the critical competencies that should be accomplished
based on national standards, industry-recognized standards,
state frameworks, or common core competencies.
Identify teaching strategies to accomplish these competencies.
Determine resources for effective instruction – media,
equipment, speakers, field trips, etc.
Decide what you will assess.
PLAN with flexibility!!
Tools for Your Toolbox
Lesson Planning. . .
What is the main idea that you want to teach?
How can you get students’ attention at the start of the lesson
and keep them engaged?
What are the key learning objectives? What should the
students know and be able to do?
What activities will help your students achieve the learning
that is to take place?
How will you assess their learning?
PLAN with flexibility!!
minnstate.edu/system/cte/ education.state.mn.us/MDE/dse/cte/
Minnesota Career & Technical Education
CTE Works! Summit November 5th and 6th 2019
• Please plan to visit us in person at the New
Teacher table at the CTE Works Summit,
• Plan to get the most out of the conference
• Networking and Resources for New Teachers
• Register online at
www.cteworksminnesota.org/
Contact Us
Shelli Sowles - Career & Technical Education Coordinator, Minnesota
Department of Education
Callon Siebenahler - Business Marketing Teacher, Shakopee High
School
Lindsey Brockberg - Agriculture Education Teacher, Mountain Lake
High School
Tom Leuthner - Pine to Prairie/Northland Consortium Secondary
Coordinator
Contact Us
State Director for Career Technical Education
Supervisor, Office of Career and College Success
CTE Professional Development Director
Resources Today:
ACTE Website Association for Career & Technical Education
www.acteonline.org
“Your First Year in CTE: 10 More Things to Know” by John
Foster/ Pamela Foster/ Clyde Hornberger/ Kathleen McNally -
Published by ACTE - Copyright 2015
Moir’s Curve - Ellen Moir, New Teacher Center, University of
California, Santa Cruz
Teaching Resources www.cteonline.org/