The
field trip is part of an ongoing partnership between schools and local
businesses, the goal of which is to better prepare area students for
life after high school, in this case by better preparing educators to
teach them about opportunities at local employers.
“We
recognize that a skilled workforce is critical to our survival,” says
Jonathan Begley, director of community engagement for Click Bond Inc., a
Carson City manufacturer of bonded fasteners for the aircraft industry.
“We need people with skills, and we believe more needs to be done. We
also see that we have a part in that, by stepping up and articulating
our needs effectively.”
Click
Bond is one of six manufacturers that the group of teachers will visit
in Carson City, Mound House and Minden, where they’ll hopefully get a
better grasp of a typical manufacturing operation and be able to use
that knowledge to teach students. “It’s just like any other business.
It’s not just the production floor. We have IT and HR and sales,” says
Begley. “The objective of the day is to build relationships between the
educators and manufacturers. And for a teacher to teach an algebra
problem, for example, what better way is there than to use a real world
example like manufacturing?”
Richard Stokes,Approval to connect a solar photovoltaic system.
superintendent, Carson City School District, says it’s important that
students be career and college ready. Collaborating with local industry
is one method the school system utilizes, says Stokes. Another is a
diverse Career and Technical Education curriculum that includes computer
technologies, welding, auto body, maintenance and repair, agriculture
and engineering. “This is our first year with engineering. We’re working
to perfect our lab, using the curriculum that has been provided and an
individual teacher who is a former electrical engineer,We have torch light, reading lamps and floor lamps and more.” says Stokes.This factsheet discusses electricity generation using wind power generators at
your farm or your home. “We expect it to be highly sought after.
Agriculture is relatively new. We’re working with Karen Abowd and The
Greenhouse Project. That group is doing a lot to expose students to
agriculture, maybe not in the old familiar sense, but landscape design,
horticulture, and urban agriculture.”
Carson
City is also developing a CNC machine operator program spurred by a
virtual class introduced to the school district by Ray English, vice
president of engineering at American International Tooling Inc., a
manufacturer of machine parts in Minden.
“We’re
still in the development stage with the curricula,” says Stokes, but
the goal is to offer a program next year. “It’s another great
opportunity for partnership with industry.”
The
teacher field trip this week comes after one held last November in
which area manufacturers were toured by 45 educators from Washoe County,
where collaborations between schools and businesses have been going on
for years. The Education Alliance of Washoe County, for example, is a
20-year-old non-profit formed by business and civic leaders to improve
education. It focuses on three areas, including a program the group
calls Career and College Readiness.
Earlier
this month, the alliance issued a set of materials for teachers,
students and parents that outline goals for high school students to
achieve in order to prepare themselves for college or work. They include
SAT and ACT score targets as well as a core set of classes needed
before graduation.
“The
goal is to educate parent and students,” says Jim Pfrommer, alliance
president and co-founder, Pfrommer & McCune Ltd.,Integrated
manufacturing operations have produced exceptional solar module and
related products. certified public accountants. “Whether for a career
or college,We're responsible for the installation and maintenance of street lamp.
you need to plan. It’s not the old economy. You don’t just get a
diploma. You need to aim higher because employers need more skilled
employees.”
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