[WomenLiteracy] webcast
Daphne Greenberg
alcdgg at langate.gsu.edu
Thu Nov 3 13:33:34 EST 2005
National Dissemination Center for Career and Technical Education
The Ohio State University
Columbus, Ohio 43210-1090
For Immediate Release
Webcast Addresses Strategies for Reinvigorating Career and Technical
Education in Urban Settings
The National Dissemination Center for Career and Technical Education will
present a webcast entitled "Reinvigorating Career and Technical Education
in Urban Settings" on November 4, 2005, 3:00 to 4:30 PM (EST). This
interactive event, and previous webcasts, can be viewed on any computer
with Internet access at http://www.nccte.org.
A career focus lies at the core of many high school reform models. This
webcast presents the findings from a five year longitudinal study that has
examined reforms organized around career pathways, career academies, and
half-time "shop"-half-time academic courses. The longitudinal design of the
study enabled it to track how the reform efforts evolved and the factors
that influenced their success.
The webcast presents findings on the effects of the reform initiatives.
Academic performance and rates of continuation to postsecondary education
of students in the reform schools will be compared to those of students in
schools not participating in the career-based reforms.
The webcast includes videotape from a visit to Foshay Learning Center, one
of the schools that participated in the study. Foshay is an inner-city
school in the Los Angeles Unified School District that serves a low-income
neighborhood. Its students perform very well on statewide tests, virtually
all of them graduate, and a high proportion continue on to higher
education. Administrators, teachers, and students will describe how
Foshay's curriculum is organized around three career academies and how this
model contributes to the school's success.
The presenters for this webcast are Marisa Castellano and Samuel
Stringfield from the University of Louisville, and James R. Stone, III,
National Research Center for Career and Technical Education, University of
Minnesota.
Castellano is a visiting associate professor in the College of Education
and Human Development at the University of Louisville. Her research has
spanned the entire K14 spectrum, from primary school reading programs to
community college basic education and occupational training. The
overarching theme of this broad research agenda is in improving the
educational opportunities of minority studentsespecially those for whom
English is a second language.
Castellano is also interested in studying whole-school-reform designs and
revamped career and technical programs that provide strong academics
integrated into relevant, real-world learning environments. She is
currently heading a longitudinal study examining the effects of whole
school reform on career and technical education at the middle school, high
school, and community college levels. Castellano has authored numerous
research articles on K12 school reform, high school career and technical
education, and community college occupational programs.
Stringfield is a distinguished university scholar and co-director of the
Nystrand Center of Excellence in Education in the College of Education and
Human Development at the University of Louisville. He is a founding editor
of the Journal of Education for Students Placed At Risk (JESPAR) and is
currently serving as the acting chair of the Educational and Psychological
Counseling Department. His research focuses on designs for improving
programs within schools, for improving whole schools, and for improving
systemic supports for schools serving disadvantaged students.
Prior to coming to the University of Louisville, Stringfield directed the
Systemic Supports for School Reform Program of the Center for Research on
the Education of Students Placed At Risk (CRESPAR), at Johns Hopkins
University. From 1999 to 2004, he served on the Baltimore City New Board of
School Commissioners. Stringfield has worked as a teacher, a program
evaluator, a Tulane University faculty member, and a coordinator of the
Denver office of Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory. He is currently
a Wood Johnson Urban Health Initiative Fellow, studying the interactions of
diverse social systems as they impact health and education.
Stone has served as director of the National Research Center for Career and
Technical Education since 2002. He has also served as the deputy director,
with responsibilities for developing new research initiatives and
coordinating the work of the Centers' associate partners Johns Hopkins
University and the Academy for Education Development. He is presently
involved in two studies: an examination of Career Technical
Education-based, whole school reforms in schools serving disadvantaged
youth; and the math-in-Career Technical Education study.
Beyond the traditional forms of disseminating research results, Stone has
worked directly with schools and school systems supporting efforts to
improve occupationally oriented education. He worked for more than five
years with the Oakland California Public Schools helping to implement a
community-based, school-to-work plan that included career academy
development and school-based enterprises. He worked with a Minneapolis high
school developing a program in partnership with the American Indian OIC
targeted at urban Native American youth. He recently completed a study of
postsecondary occupational/technical education in Minnesota.
Viewers of the webcast may ask questions of the panel by signing up (no
charge) for a chatroom account at http://www.nccte.org. The chatroom allows
you to submit questions during the presentation. Please allow one full day
for your account to be validated by e-mail confirmation.
To subscribe or unsubscribe from this e-mail list, please visit this web
page: http://www.nccte.org/ctemail/subscription.asp or send an e-mail to
nagy.8 at osu.edu or contact Barbara Reardon below.
The work reported herein was supported under the National Dissemination
Center for Career and Technical Education (PR/Award No. VO51A990004) and/or
under the National Research Center for Career and Technical Education
(PR/Award No. VO51A990006), as administered by the Office of Vocational and
Adult Education, U.S. Department of Education. However, the contents do not
necessarily represent the positions or policies of the Office of Vocational
and Adult Education or the U.S. Department of Education, and you should not
assume endorsement by the federal government. The National Dissemination
Center for Career and Technical Education and the National Research Center
for Career and Technical Education are funded by the Office of Vocational
and Adult Education, U.S. Department of Education.
For Additional Information Contact:
Barbara Reardon
The Ohio State University
Director of Communications
Columbus, Ohio 43210-1090
Phone: 614-292-2894
Fax: 614-688-3258
Email: reardon.30 at osu.edu
Web site: www.nccte.org
More information about the WomenLiteracy
mailing list
|
|