College and Career Ready Its Simple When You Give Them What They - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
College and Career Ready Its Simple When You Give Them What They - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
College and Career Ready Its Simple When You Give Them What They Need Who are we? 35 sending schools 21 programs 5 sites LCC West LCC Downtown AIS Construction Potter Park Zoo Olivet College (at Farm Bureau
Who are we?
35 sending schools 21 programs 5 sites
LCC West LCC Downtown AIS Construction Potter Park Zoo Olivet College (at Farm Bureau Insurance)
What we offer…
AM and PM sessions High school and college
credit
High school 4th year math
credit
Work based learning
- pportunities
Career development Career and Technical
Student Organizations
National Technical Honor
Society
Data from 2010-2011
All Students
High school credit = 98% College credit = 89% National T
echnical Honor Society = 25%
Special Needs Students
High school credit = 100% College credit = 90% National T
echnical Honor Society = 17 % of 101 students inducted
Current year enrollment data
Total number of students = 465 Total number of special needs students = 95 or 20.5% Academic at risk = 114 students or 25% Staff to student ratio = 1/14 (33/465)
“If students sense that they are not welcome, accepted, and supported in the classroom, the probability is low that they will engage in classroom activities.”
Marzano, Pickering, & Heflebower (2011)
Career Preparation Center Staff
Key Players
- Principal
- Student Service Coordinator
- Academic Support
- Instructor – most are Lansing Community College staff
Principal
Relationships – with students and staff
- Meets buses daily
- Addresses students by name
- Makes effort to make parent contacts
- Synervoice and Skyward announcements/access
Consistency – with students and staff
- Refers to and follows student handbook
- Expectation of college an career ready behavior
Visibility – with students and staff
- Greets students in café before class begins
- Walks halls and stops in classrooms on a regular basis
Student Service Coordinator
Relationships–students, instructors, and Academic Support
Know students by name Provide comfort level and level of respect
Support Instructors
Provide a presence in class Research – classroom strategies, student opportunities Assist with community connections – field trips, job shadows,
guest speakers
Deliver career and post-secondary planning – tools beyond
high school
Provide career planning activities for Eaton County 7th
and 8th graders
Peer relationships are equally as important as teacher/student relationships.
(Ladd, Herald-Brown, & Kochel, 2009)
The longer that students are rejected by their peers, the less likely they are to participate in classroom activities.
(Ladd, Herald-Brown, & Kochel, 2006)
Academic Support
Relationships – with students, instructors, and SSC
Help students maximize their strengths Collaboration with teachers Monitor all students’ grades and progress
Total Tutoring
Help with homework – Career Center and high school T
est prep/review/reading – individually or in the classroom
Special needs students
Assure that accommodations are in place Help students learn to advocate for self
Organization, study skills, and learning styles
Individual students or entire classes
Academic Strategies
Strategies that are taught to students
- Study, test taking, reading strategies
- Learning styles/strategies
- Use of whiteboards, flashcards, flip charts
- Use of study games
- Mnemonics: chants, songs, acronyms, pacing
- Organization skills
- Networking
Instructor
Relationships – with students, SSC, Academic Support, and
Principal
College expectations on a college campus Experts in their field
Flexibility
Revolving door Presence of other adults in class Students being pulled from class
Teaching strategies
Willingness to try new strategies Strive to make learning fun
Chad Bennett – Graphic Design Maurice Armstrong – Criminal Justice
Annie Wojtkowski - Fashion Frank Medrano – Law Enforcement
Instructor Video Clips
Total Tutoring
Total Tutoring began in
October 2010
Available at West Campus 30 minutes before class – am
& pm
1,681 students visited last
year!
Students worked on CTE
homework, home school homework, resumes, portfolio pieces, and accuplacer.
Students Video Clips
Special Populations
100% of our special
education students earned high school credit
90% of our special
education students earned some college credit
Certifications
146 certifications were earned
Safety & Pollution Prevention, State of
MI Brakes test, C.E.R.T., Health Care Provider (CPR), CENA, Sparrow HIPPA, Blood Borne Pathogens LCC, National Health Care Foundation Assessment, AWS, Serve Safe, CPR, First Aid, FEMA 100, A+ Essentials, A+ IT Technician, A+ Certified, Blood borne Pathogen Exposure/Prevention, Playground Supervision, Playground Maintenance & Intervention, HIV/AIDS Awareness
National Technical Honor Society
25% of the students who attend
the CPC are members of NTHS!
17 % of NTHS members are
special needs students
To qualify a student must:
- Maintain A- or better every grading
term
- 4 absences or less for the first half of
the year and the same for the second half.
- Community service
- Character reference
Career and Technical Student Organizations
28% of our students participated
in a CTSO.
35% of CTSO participants were
special pops
4 students qualified for SkillsUSA
Nationals.
Calvin Hamilton placed 2nd in the
Nation in Technical Drafting!
Sarah Kyes Pin Design was chosen
for the 2011 Michigan pin.
Austin Chuhak & Heather Delong
participated in Web Design.
College Credits
Students earned a total of
2,481 Lansing Community College credits this year.
An average of 6 credits
per student
College Credits
Work Based Learning Experiences
170 guest speakers
presented to students at the career center. Guest Speakers
Internships & Job Shadows
164 students had
internships/placements related to the program they were in
323 students completed a