So what is CTE and how does it differ from Vo-Tech? Career and Technical Education (CTE) is a successful marriage of career and technical training and rigorous academics. The infamous Vo-Tech (Vocational Technical Education) isn't a bad thing, but it's got a bad rap. It's not right to stereotype, but it happens, and Vo-Tech's stereotypical student is the problem child who can't make it at high school, has no hope at college and gets dumped at "The Vo-Tech". With that stereotype in mind, anyone can see why it's important to make the move to a more accurate representation of what happens at the Career Center. CTE students get the best of both worlds: the academic piece and the college and career readiness piece.
Did you know?
Below are just a few statistics from ACTE:
CTE Works for High School Students
High school students involved in CTE are more engaged, perform better and graduate at higher rates.
Postsecondary CTE fosters postsecondary completion and prepares students and adults for in-demand careers.
CTE addresses the needs of high-growth industries and helps close the skills gap.
Source: "What Is CTE?" Association for Career and Technical Education. ACTE, n.d. Web. 25 Aug. 2015.
Did you know?
- Over half of ESACC graduates continue on to some type of post-secondary education and the other half go into a branch of the military or workforce.
- Students at ESACC are able to earn 1/2 English IV credit per year, focusing on technical communication and college and career preparation.
- Students at ESACC participate in building-wide Math to improve college and career math skills.
- All junior and senior students have the opportunity to earn at least one industry recognized credential.
Below are just a few statistics from ACTE:
CTE Works for High School Students
High school students involved in CTE are more engaged, perform better and graduate at higher rates.
- The average high school graduation rate for students concentrating in CTE programs is 93 percent, compared to an average national freshman graduation rate of 80 percent.
- More than 75 percent of secondary CTE concentrators pursued postsecondary education shortly after high school.
Postsecondary CTE fosters postsecondary completion and prepares students and adults for in-demand careers.
- 4 out of 5 secondary CTE graduates who pursued postsecondary education after high school had earned a credential or were still enrolled two years later.
- A person with a CTE-related associate degree or credential will earn on average between $4,000 and $19,000 more a year than a person with a humanities associate degree.
CTE addresses the needs of high-growth industries and helps close the skills gap.
- The skilled trades are the hardest jobs to fill in the United States, with recent data citing 806,000 jobs open in the trade, transportation and utilities sector and 293,000 jobs open in manufacturing.
- Health care occupations, many of which require an associate degree or less, make up 12 of the 20 fastest growing occupations.
- STEM occupations such as environmental engineering technicians require an associate degree and will experience faster than average job growth.
Source: "What Is CTE?" Association for Career and Technical Education. ACTE, n.d. Web. 25 Aug. 2015.