RE: Jumping Ship

From: Phillip Capper (phillip.capper@webresearch.co.nz)
Date: Tue Feb 19 2002 - 14:49:29 PST


Kevin's story highlights for me what is for me the fundamental contradiction
in the whole school to work field:

The political rhetoric is that schooling is a democratic process of
maximising individual potential and providing individuals with the greatest
possible number of personal options in being a productive and
self-actualised member of society. This rhetoric is the same, but with
different slants, from both the education and business communities.

The actual behaviour - again in both the education system and business
communities - is about the rationing of access to the most desirable
(however defined) productive roles, and the use of the education system as a
drafting artefact in the rationing process.

An example of the paralysis that this contradiction engenders (because it
cannot be made explicit - or cannot be 'visibilised, to use Yrjo's language)
is the recent British Engineering Employers' Federation submission to the UK
govenrment on the teaching of Science and Technology.

(Ho hum, here we go again!!!) In it they rail against the poor uptake of
Science and Technology subjects by British secondary students, and locate
the solution in 'making these subjects more relevant to students' actual
lives'. Then they go on to suggest that considering how a leading
footballer's boots are made is an example of how 'relevance' may be created.

Being thus unable to truly face up to the actual contextual 'reality' of
many student's lives, and the implications of those contexts for their own
behaviour, they are left with nowhere to go but a leading footballer's
boots. It seems to me that when teachers buy into this sort of stuff, a
great indicator of a student's developmental progress can be found in how
quickly they see through such crap.

Phillip Capper,
Centre for Research on Work, Education and Business Ltd. (WEB Research),
Level 9
142 Featherston Street
(PO Box 2855)
WELLINGTON
New Zealand

Ph: +64 4 499 8140
Fx: +64 4 499 8395
Mb: +64 021 519 741

http://www.webresearch.co.nz

-----Original Message-----
From: Kevin Rocap [mailto:krocap@csulb.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, 19 February 2002 3:20 p.m.
To: xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
Subject: Re: Jumping Ship

Dear friends,

I've had some experience in the School-to-Work arena as well, working to
facilitate and integrate diverse stakeholder groups in a large urban
school district.

The School-to-Work focus allowed us to bring together a number of folks
who simply weren't talking much across their diverse roles: business
folks, union folks, ROP, JTPA, Perkins Voc Ed folks, Special Ed folks,
higher ed folks, library folks, machinists, Adult School folks, high
school teachers and administrators and some elementary education folks.
That was the (somewhat) enlightening part, though not really surprising,
finding out just how little people knew about each others' work and
resources.

My interest and challenge was to get the group not only to look at new
possibilities for collaboration or coordination or resource sharing, but
to address the issue of a majority minority (mostly language minority)
school-age population. Few of them had adequately addressed language
minority issues in their programs.

While some high schools had developed Career Academies and Career
"Houses" they had simultaneously created "ESL Academies." It took a lot
of work to get the group to recognize that creating career and higher
education pathways for native English speakers and only creating
opportunities to develop English language skills for English Language
Learners does not constitute either an equitable or desirable
School-to-Work program. We had to look at the language requirements and
possibilities for inclusion in internships, externships and academic
learning opportunities for speakers of languages other than English.

The group had also not considered ways to support involvement of the
growing number of small and medium minority-run businesses (though all
of the literature makes clear that most jobs are in the small and
medium-sized businesses). Mapping opportunities in the healthcare
industry and in public policy also came up, but with a largely
white-guys network the initiative and a sense of the real potentials was
not strong enough at the time. Some of the more innovative arrangements
were made for work opportunities working in the Ports, which make use of
some fairly high tech machinery (and high tech training programs), with
an active union membership.

Pinpointing the object or objects of that complex mix of ostensibly
joint activities might make an interesting case in itself. People were
driven by everything from the requirements of their federal funding
streams, to fear of the perceived changing demographics, to jockying for
position a a "city father" - two separate business groups formed, in
part, it seemed to one-up the other, though we ended up getting the two
together. Country club affiliations including who is "in" and who is
"out" also affected who participated at which meetings and towards what
ends.

Ultimately the group came together around the common watering hole of a
new funding opportunity so some gains were made both rhetorically and
operationally in bringing factions together towards the "seamless"
ideal. I think things most approximate becoming "seamless" when joint
decision-making over budgets is agreed upon (which is rare).

Just a few notes on School-to-Work.

In Peace,
K.



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