Transcript Slide 1

AchieveTexas In Action:
College and Career Redesign
TETN #25578
2/26/08
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
www.lmci.state.tx.us
Texas Achievement Plan
Steps for Working with Students
1.
Ask students to prepare in advance.
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Equip students with the resources to
begin developing their personalized
program of study.
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AchieveTexas
www.achievetexas.org
America’s Career InfoNet
www.acinet.org/acinet
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Career Voyages
www.careervoyages.gov
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
Texas Achievement Plan
Steps for Working with Students
2. Help students choose a cluster.
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Match student strengths and interests to
related careers.
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Career Clusters Inventory,
www.careerclusters.org
OSCAR, http://www.ioscar.org/tx/
Texas Cares,
http://www.cdr.state.tx.us/shared/cares.asp
Bridges, CareerCruising, COIN, Kuder, or
others
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
Occupation
and
Skills
Computer-
Assisted
Researcher
Texas Achievement Plan
Steps for Working with Students
Help students pick a Program of Study (POS)
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Refer to the state-recognized POS for
suggested core courses, career electives,
and postsecondary options,
www.achievetexas.org under Programs of
Study.
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POS should be the basis for the TAP
4. Help students identify a career goal
3.
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Communicate to students that working toward a
tangible goal makes school more relevant.
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
Texas Achievement Plan
Steps for Working with Students
5.
Help students identify a postsecondary
goal
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Reinforce the value of lifelong learning by
planning for education and training after
high school
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
AchieveTexas
Programs of
Study
115+ Models
Available
What is a Program of Study?
1. Program of Study names,
established in the State's Career
Cluster Initiative
(www.careerclusters.org ), head
each model. They focus attention
upon a specific career field within a
cluster.
What is a Program of Study?
2. Career goals shown here
correlate with occupational
names and O*NET codes used
by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS). Use OSCAR
(www.ioscar.org) to begin
investigating those careers of
interest. The "goal" of models is
to target In-Demand jobs.
What is a Program of Study?
3. Career Options provide
examples of contemporary
job titles currently
appearing in sources, such
as WorkInTexas
(https://wit.twc.state.tx.us).
Jobs are correlated to the
postsecondary education
typically required for a
career.
Texas Achievement Plan
Steps for Working with Students
6.
Help students design a course schedule .
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7.
Encourage extended learning activities.
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Explain that rigorous academic and relevant
career classes ensure students can achieve
their goals.
POS provide recommendations for core
courses and career-related electives which
are appropriate for the selected career goal.
POS indicate the fourth math and fourth
science credits.
Show students how out-of-class experiences
enhance and expand curriculum.
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
What is a Program of Study?
4. High School Suggested
Coursework highlights the Core
Courses and Career-Related
Electives recommended to
prepare for a career goal.
Models are based on the
Recommended High School
Graduation Plan and can easily
be adapted for the Distinguished
Achievement High School
Graduation Plan. With
established models it is easier to
anticipate the consequence of
curriculum changes, such as
when legislation recently
increased math and science
requirements, or whenever a
student decides to modify her/his
TAP.
What is a Program of Study?
5. Extended Learning Experiences
include Work-Based Learning,
Curricular, and Extracurricular
activities. Participation in and
support of Career and
Technical Student
Organizations (i.e. BPA, DECA,
FBLA, FCCLA, FFA, TSA, HOSA,
or SkillsUSA) is especially
important to AchieveTexas.
While campuses might modify
their list of Extracurricular and
Service Learning Experiences,
examples should always
cohesively extend meaningful
learning in settings suitable
and safe for students.
Students could record volunteer
service in their portfolios, or
participate in a program such as The
President's Volunteer Service Award
(http://www.presidentialserviceawar
ds.org/index.cfm) where school
groups may, likewise, record their
service hours.
Benefits for Counselors
Meets §TEC 28.0212 regarding Personal
Graduation Plans (PGPs) and TEC
§33.007—Counseling Public School
Students Regarding Higher Education.
 Supports Model Comprehensive,
Developmental Guidance, and
Counseling Program required by TEC
§33.005.
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Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
Comprehensive, Developmental Guidance,
and Counseling Program
Four core components form the
foundation:
1. A guidance curriculum
2. A responsive services component
3. An individual planning system
4. System support
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Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
Talking to Students about
AchieveTexas
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It’s all about them
Exploring career options
Making school matter
Making a plan
Getting a head start
Rising to the top of the pool
Making their diploma worth more
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
Talking to Parents about
AchieveTexas
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Connecting classrooms to careers
Every student benefits
Designed to fit each student
Providing direction
Taking responsibility
Meeting state standards
Flexibility
Parents play a key role
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.
Local Implementation Examples
Denton ISD
 Martha Thompson
 Carla Ruge
Georgetown ISD
 Gwen Davis
 Charles Aguillon
Copyright © Texas Education Agency,
2008.