Posted on 11/23/2024 1:53:35 PM PST by algore
Edgar was a pain in the neck.
Or maybe we should say, it was difficult for some of the teachers at Edgar’s high school to appreciate his distinct learning style. Edgar was disruptive. He had a smart mouth and tried to talk his way out of everything, including his poor grades in core classes.
Today, barely out of high school, Edgar is the lead foreman for a California-based union carpentry company that designs and builds upscale retail shops for high-end clients like Louis Vuitton. He is well established on a lucrative career path at a time when some of his former classmates are still racking up debt at four-year colleges.
Not everyone at Edgar’s high school considered him to be a problem student. Kirk Shafer, who today works as the career and technical education (CTE) director at Brandywine High School in Niles, Michigan, never understood what all the fuss was about when it came to Edgar. In the eyes of Shafer — an experienced woodworker as well as Edgar’s former woodshop instructor at a different school — Edgar was the model student.
“I knew he'd be successful,” Shafer told me recently. “But the other teachers couldn’t handle him. And that always confused me. He was my best student! I love that kid. He was a talker. He was mischievous. He just was in the wrong environment.”
Among the tangle of events in the early 21st century that would hamstring the U.S. manufacturing base for at least a decade sat the No Child Left Behind Act, the sweeping public school reform act passed with bipartisan support and signed into law in 2002.
At the heart of the act was the creation of federal guidelines for student achievement that were measured through annual standardized tests. The results of these tests, focused on reading and math and administered by the states, were the core metrics used to evaluate school performance, teacher performance and school funding.
Here’s how Shafer explains the impact that No Child Left Behind had on CTE: “The CTE classes were non-core classes,” he says. “The law made the requirements to graduate much more stringent, and since the CTE classes were non-core classes, students didn’t have as much access to them anymore. Even the students who were struggling in their core classes, who are sometimes our best students because they excel with hands-on learning, didn’t have time in their schedules anymore.”
If you have ever wondered why “shop” classes disappeared from many public schools during the aughts and early 2010s, this is part of the reason why.
The good news is that state school systems across the country, like Brandywine Middle/High School, are beginning to figure out solutions. Brandywine is part of a consortium of school districts in Berrien County that operate under a model, approved by the Michigan Department of Education, in which individual school districts can partner and share a range of CTE programs among students within the county. In other words, students at one high school can attend CTE programs at other schools.
Brandywine’s CTE program offers metalworking/machining, mechanical drafting, as well as a woodworking/cabinet making program, auto shop and others. Students enrolled in these programs often travel from other schools to attend classes at Brandywine, with transportation between schools provided. Crucially, some of the courses in these programs count as math credits.
Another nuance: In Michigan, teaching a secondary CTE program requires two years or 4,000 hours of “recent and relevant” experience in the occupational area. All 4,000 hours may come from direct business or industry experience. The level of required experience varies between states, but these guidelines recognize that hiring qualified instructors for something like Brandywine’s machine tool program is difficult enough without requiring a teaching certificate or degree on top of industry experience.
Individual state funding for CTE programs, along with other revenue sources like federal Perkins grants, are providing vital support for a manufacturing industry desperate for talent. But as Shafer knows, given the industry’s needs — as well as those of students with different learning styles and aspirations — these sources are still far from sufficient.
Shafer is trying to raise the funds needed to build the Brandywine Manufacturing Center — a new building that will house equipment to serve the three disciplines that fall under the system’s manufacturing umbrella (a machine tool discipline, cabinet making, and mechanical drafting). Shafer is in the middle of negotiations with local businesses for funding and naming rights.
Smart business leaders will see the opportunity here. Just as state and federal education departments immediately need to increase support for CTE programs around the country, solving the skilled worker crisis in the American manufacturing industry will require that businesses put more skin in the game.
And why wouldn’t they? The data alone provides the evidence: The Michigan Department of Education says that 95% of high school students enrolled in a CTE program graduated in 2022. Michigan’s overall graduation rate? 81%. Even the federal Department of Education touts this statistic on its CTE website: Eight years after their expected graduation date, students who focused on CTE courses while in high school had higher median annual earnings than students who did not focus on CTE.
And as long as we’re making righteous demands, I ask our overworked and underpaid middle- and high-school teachers and counselors to recognize the vital role that CTE programs play for kids who may not excel in traditional classroom settings. So when the next Edgar strides into the room, you’ll know what to do.
The 3 most useful classes from my grade 9 thru 12 were wood shop, home finance and male home ec.
I learned more how to take care of myself in those classes than than any other.
It’s getting ridiculous. We now have 2 GENERATIONS of adults who have never even butt-spliced a wire, much less changed a flat.
If the US wants to remain a superpower, something I still support despite the stupidity of trying to fight Russians in their backyard, then we will need Americans who understand which end of a screwdriver to hold.
“Why do you listen to a shop teacher missing fingers?”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m2ocSO-J4mM&t=809s
I made a gun rack when I took Shop in HS, had space for 4 guns and a drawer for ammunition.
My father got it mounted on a wall in our house.
“Stop screwing around!”
Early Tim Allen standup was the best.
I made one of those too, back in 1982 - had it for years!
Absolutely impressed. That takes massive patience and attention to detail. Besides the pride you got from having it on the wall, you learned things so far beyond simple carpentry from that.
Catholic girls high school here. We learned how to sit on a chair without looking behind us by using a leg to touch the chair. Your classes sound FAR more useful.
“...wood shop, home finance and male home...”
From 1963-1067, my HS offered wood shop, but not the other two. I learned those well from my Parents, and on my own, to my benefit thru life.
I was at building things and still am, I was so proud of myself making the gun rack and that my father liked it and mounted it to the wall and filled it with guns.
Before medical school, the three most important classes I took were wood shop, metal shop, and electrical shop.
I meant to say I was terrible at building things.
We had wood shop and metal shop in the 7th grade. The girls had Home Economics.
same for colleges,
turning out millions of “graduates’ many of whom can’t do a damned thing
either for themselves
or for other people
or for any potential employers.
no skills whatsoever.
and the irony is that the schools deliberately dropped most of these practical classes, THEY HAD THEM and shut them down instead of expanding them to incorporate the newest techologies and skill sets needed for same
restore ROTC, firearms safety and shooting skills classes and competitions too!
More of this!
I have a lot more respect for the community college near me that teaches skilled vocations than I do the 4-year university of debauchery.
Add 3D printing, laser cutting, CAD design, and PCB layout and you’d need to double the size of school shops to accommodate the demand. And a course in entrepreneurship to support all the startups that would rest.
I took shop every year in HS. By my senior year I was in shop class 4 hours a day.
Later in life, I built a solid cherry dining room suite, and several other pieces of furniture.
I’ve been out of the game for many years because of health issues. Thanks to successful back surgery, I’m back in my home shop getting my tools back in shape for another go at it.
” We now have 2 GENERATIONS of adults who have never even butt-spliced a wire, much less changed a flat.”
They don’t know what a screwdriver is.
We had mandatory home ec type classes in grammar school in Chicago during the early 50’s. Among other things, I learned
to sew WITH NEEDLES! Still use it to this day! CPS was very rigorous, thorough and good in those days. Now it is a sick joke shot through with communist termite union filth that produces the dregs of society.
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