Work Based Learning – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Wed, 10 Jan 2024 21:51:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Work Based Learning – 社区黑料 32 32 Indiana Seeks to 鈥楾ransform鈥 High School, Making Work Skills a Priority /article/indiana-seeks-to-transform-high-school-making-work-skills-a-priority/ Tue, 28 Nov 2023 12:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=718182 Indiana legislators and education officials are rallying behind a move to 鈥渢ransform鈥 the state鈥檚 high schools by making career skills a major focus through more internships, apprenticeships and a drive to earn career credentials before graduating.

Repeatedly , the state legislature ordered Indianapolis education officials to rethink the mission of high schools. 

Current graduation requirements will be thrown out next year and new ones calling for more career preparation will take their place.


Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 社区黑料 Newsletter


鈥淎re the four years of high school as valuable as possible for students?鈥 state education secretary Katie Jenner asked in an interview with 社区黑料. 鈥淚’ve yet to meet a person who said, 鈥榊es, they are.鈥 Most people say … if high school looked different for students, then we could better connect them to what鈥檚 what’s next.鈥

鈥淚f that’s the case, then what barriers do we need to get out of the way?鈥 she continued. 鈥淗ow can we transform it in order to make it better for students.鈥 

Jenner said having students spend time in workplaces to see what careers fit them, or earning career credentials, will help both students and businesses.

鈥淭hat’s really what we’re trying to think through in Indiana, to not only better support Indiana students, but to also be mindful of Indiana’s talent pipeline,鈥 Jenner said.

Republican State Rep. Chuck Goodrich, who helped lead the charge earlier this year to create a key piece of the new focus 鈥 $5,000 Career Scholarship Accounts that sophomores, juniors and seniors can use for career training 鈥 said students need better opportunities to gain skills.

鈥淕iving students hands-on applied learning opportunities and the ability to earn a credential before graduation is a game changer, not only for the student, not only for the family, but for Indiana,鈥 Goodrich told the state Senate this spring.聽

Indiana already has a requirement students show 鈥渄emonstrable employability skills鈥 to graduate from high school, but it currently counts playing on a school team, other extracurricular activities, community service, an after-school job or a capstone research project the same as doing an internship or apprenticeship.

The new requirements will be more work and skills-focused.

The Career Scholarship Accounts are an early piece of the overhaul the legislature passed this spring in House Bill 1002. The bill contains another immediate change 鈥 requiring schools to teach students more this upcoming academic year about career planning, available training programs, scholarships, and different jobs available, 鈥渨ith an emphasis on high wage, high demand industry,鈥 according to the new law. 

Major parts of the overhaul, particularly which career preparation steps should be required to graduate and which just encouraged, are still to be determined.

The Indiana education department is holding focus groups with parents, educators and businesses about how to shape the new vision and should have proposals for the state board to discuss early next year. New graduation requirements will be set by the end of 2024, Jenner said, to kick in for the class of 2029.

Among the key items being discussed:

  • A greater emphasis on students鈥 job shadowing, internships and apprenticeships that only 鈥渁 tiny percentage鈥 of students experience now, according to Jenner.
  • Changing the courses required to graduate.
  • Requiring more meeting time with career counselors or businesses
  • Requiring students to earn credentials for careers before graduating.
  • Piloting 鈥渕astery鈥 approaches to measuring student progress, throwing out traditional A-F grades, replacing them with tracking student progress toward their mastery or competency of skills. Workplace skills like teamwork and critical thinking would be measured, not just core subjects like English and math.

The efforts are attracting some national attention. Patricia Levesque, CEO of the Excellence In Education Foundation, visited Indianapolis this fall to praise the state for being a national leader in preparing students for careers, not just college.

Though Indiana is better than other states in helping students earn credentials, she warned too many students are being guided to many credentials businesses aren鈥檛 seeking.

“Nearly 60 to 70 percent of the credentials earned by high school students that year had no value,鈥 she said of Indiana. 鈥淣o company was asking for those credentials, right? Students were earning something that didn’t have currency in the marketplace.鈥

Some legislators say they are concerned the overhaul is more an attempt to help businesses find employees than help students.

鈥淭his rethinking, reimagining of high school is our attempt at filling these jobs to me,鈥 said Democratic State Sen. Shelli Yoder before voting against House Bill 1002. 鈥淲e’re doing a disservice for students. And that’s not to say we don’t need to reimagine it … It’s going to help the workforce. But is it helping students?鈥

Schools, like Victory College Prep high school in Indianapolis, are already on board with the main idea of the change. That school has placed every 11th and 12th grader in internships with companies or nonprofits for 10 school days a year the last five years, other than some pandemic adjustments.

鈥淲e really believe here that graduation is not the end goal for our students,鈥 said Rahul Jyoti, the school鈥檚 chief readiness officer. 鈥淲e don’t want them to celebrate and say, 鈥楬ey, I graduated. This is great鈥. Because then real life hits you, especially for a lot of our students that come from the underserved communities, here in Indianapolis, and so really, this is the starting point.鈥

Jyoti said his school has been able to find 25 and 40 employers a year to host students, but wonders what will happen if every school in the state tries to find similar opportunities for every student.

Jenner said connecting with enough employers willing to take on the work of running internships or apprenticeships will be a challenge. 

鈥淥ne of the threats is that we transform the high school diploma and鈥eadiness for Work Based Learning … and there aren’t there aren’t enough spots for kids,鈥 she said.

Solving that issue is a big part of her work this fall and was a key reason the state sent delegations to Switzerland, where school and business cooperation on apprenticeships is a part of the culture. She said work based learning experiences may need to be different for different industries and may have to evolve over time, but the state has to start somewhere.

鈥淲e’re getting after it because we have to and we must for kids,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e’re going to learn some lessons along the way and we’re gonna keep getting better from there. But we can’t wait to get started. We have to go. We have to try some things.鈥

]]>