Governance

ONLINE DATABASE

Adolescent Literacy

Advanced Placement

Career and Technical Education

College-Ready Standards

Dual Enrollment

Early/Middle College High Schools

Exit Exams

Graduation Rates

Graduation Requirements

High School/College Alignment

High School-Level Accountability

High School-Level Assessment

Highlights of Local Initiatives

International Baccalaureate

P-16/P-20 Councils

Postsecondary Feedback Systems

Special Populations in High School Assessments

State Data Systems

State Initiatives to Improve High Schools

STEM

Student Accountability

Student Support and Remediation

Virtual High Schools



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Advanced Placement

College-Ready Indicators

Dispelling the Myths About Raising Grad Requirements

Dropout Recovery

Dual Enrollment

Early College High Schools

Ensuring Rigor

Involving Families

P-16

P-16 Landmines

Parental Involvement at the HS Level

Remediation

Science Lab Costs

State Supports for Low-Performing High Schools

Teacher Professional Development

Teachers and "College Knowledge"

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Alignment of HS/PS

High School Agenda - Who's Doing What (2008 update)

Math and Science

P-16

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Nevada Dropout Prevention Summit
(PowerPoint, 300K, 11/08).

MIND Research Institute Forum
(PowerPoint, 3MB, 10/08)

Alaska Legislators and Educators: Dropout Prevention
(PowerPoint, 792K, 10/08)

Alaska Legislators and Educators: P-16
(PowerPoint, 432K, 10/08)

Kauffman Math and Science Seminar
(PowerPoint, 5.5MB, 5/08)

New York Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Legislative Caucus Weekend
(PowerPoint, 108K, 2/08)

Colorado P-20 Council
(PowerPoint 92K, 2/08)

Nevada P-16 Advisory Council
(PowerPoint, 217K, 12/07)

Colorado Dropout Prevention Summit
(PowerPoint, 540K, 12/07)

ECS 2007 Fall Steering Committee Meeting
(PowerPoint, 222K, 11/07)

Oklahoma Senate Education Committee
(PowerPoint, 977K, 10/07)

ECS 2007 National Forum on Education Policy
(PowerPoint, 319K, 7/07)

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High School Policy Center
Learn more about the ECS High School Policy Center (HSPC) and join our e-mail list to receive updates as new High School Policy Center products are posted on ecs.org.

Also be sure to visit the High School issue site.


Welcome to the Education Commission of the States' High School Database


Career and Technical Education

Why this issue matters

  • Quality of program matters. Career and technical education programs often bridge systems, so they need to be aligned across systems.
  • Using the career clusters indicates a state focus on strengthening career and technical education.
  • Broadening alternative pathways from limited choices such as auto mechanics and cosmetology to law, health sciences and areas such as STEM creates greater opportunities and increased rigor.
  • For career and technical programs to serve as a viable high school reform strategy, the state should establish a means of weeding out weaker programs and promoting rigorous programs.
  • Career and technical education teachers with industry-based credentials have demonstrated that they have the academic knowledge of the subject.

Why our methodology matters

  • Primary resources: ECS draws its information primarily from state statute, rules and regulations, recently enacted legislation, executive orders and other primary source documents.
  • As needed, policies (and their interpretation) are confirmed with state-level staff.
  • We believe that policy helps institutionalize practice.
  • Our goal is to document where the underlying authority lies, and where consensus has been strong enough to adopt a common approach.

Related ECS products

Staff contact:
Melodye Bush, researcher
303.299.3631
mbush@ecs.org

State Profiles




A report containing all information available in the Career/Technical Education database for a single state.

Select States and Data Points: Choose the states and data points to appear in a personalized report.

50-State Reports


 

  1. Career/Technical Education (all data points for all states)

  2. Title of program (i.e., Career and Technical Education)

  3. Governing body

  4. Agency or agencies providing program oversight

  5. Districts/high schools required to provide CTE program

  6. Career clusters the state has identified

  7. Statewide emphasis/focus on specific area(s) such as high tech

  8. Employability skill assessment tools are used to ensure program quality

  9. Quality control mechanism(s) (program approval/review process, certificate of mastery, system emphasis on rigor, funding for districts to purchase/adopt rigorous programs of study, etc.)

  10. Teaching quality components

  11. Graduation requirements (i.e., career/vocational courses are a required option for all students, all students must complete a career concentration/major/sequence, a student may substitute an approved CTE course for a standard core course to meet high school graduation requirements, state-level career/technical diploma or endorsement is available)

  12. Tech Prep or similar focus (2+2)

  13. Funding mechanisms (i.e., enhanced FTE for CTE students, a line item, special grants, etc.)

  14. Unique features of note

__________________________________________________________

Use the diagram below to view the components of state-level high school reform, and their relationship to one another (the links shown in grey are coming soon).

Comments? Questions? Contact Jennifer Dounay at 303.299.3689 or jdounay@ecs.org.

high school database site map high school and college requirements graduation requirements standard diploma honors and college prep technical high school-level assessments data systems localized initiatives planning and counseling international baccalaureate advanced placement coursework options exit exams special populations support and remediation virtual high schools P-16/P-20 councils postsecondary feedback systems adolescent literacy STEM CTEearly middle colleges state initiatives

Comments?




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