Friday, March 31, 2006
What Do You Tell Tomorrow's Teachers?
Ok... here's a question for you. A kid comes up to you and says, "I want to be a teacher. Will I be able to get a job?" What do you say?
In the past year, I've heard confusing information about the market for primary and secondary school teachers in Pennsylvania. Our elementary, middle and high schools have many teachers who are nearing retirement age. But is that a problem when you live in a state with 93 schools that prepare primary and secondary school teachers? Will our supply of emerging workers meet the demands of our employers?
The answer is yes and no.
Labor supply and demand is not uniform across all teaching jobs. You can't replace a physics teacher with a spanish teacher. There are also geographic differences in demand. While teaching opportunities may be growing in suburban areas, they are likely to decline in some depopulating urban areas.
Two interesting resources that discuss this challenge in more detail:
1. This Tribune Review article highlights the relative ease with which Hempfield High School is able to fill open positions. In fact, they rarely place a "help wanted" advertisement. However, certain teaching specialities (math, science, foreign language) are much harder to fill.
http://pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/education/s_437165.html
2. The Three Rivers Workforce Investment Board has highlighted primary and secondary teaching opportunities in the "Promising Career Pathways" series. http://www.trwib.org/PCP/Teachers_text.htm
So what would you tell a kid who wants to be a teacher?
Thursday, March 30, 2006
Hot Date on April 28
Please consider joining me at the Mon Valley Education Consortium's "Designing Our Destiny" event on Friday, April 28th at the Pittsburgh Marriott City Center from 5:30-7:30 pm. The event highlights the Consortium's student career exploration program, "The Future is Mine." This celebration will give you the chance to see how students learn about the world of work. I think you'll be impressed by the creativity, energy and determination of the students.
Let's face it, career development activities are few and far between in our school system. This is a great opportunity to show that you think it's important to prepare kids for the world of work. The exhibit hall format also gives you the chance to learn at your own pace. (This means you won't be stuck sitting through a long program!)
Reservations are necessary. RSVP by Wednesday, April 19, to the Consortium office at 412-678-9215.
Wednesday, March 29, 2006
Gaming ROI
Skill development via video game. Interesting.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.04/learn.html
Monday, March 27, 2006
Too Many Skilled Workers?
There's a new book on my reading list, "The Disposable American: Layoffs and Their Consequences" by Louis Uchitelle. The NYTimes had a thought provoking article about the topic in yestersday's paper. The sad story is that despite our best efforts to retrain laid off workers, sometimes it's nearly impossible to find new careers with comparable benefits and wages.
While there are many good points in the article, there were a few points that seemed oversimplified and misleading.
1. The author suggests that US employment policy is overly education and training-focused. This may have been the case under JTPA, but under WIA standards there is a much stronger effort to place people in jobs. We don't simply train people for positions because they want to go to training. There's a much stronger effort to train people for in-demand jobs.
2. "We have an oversupply of skilled people." This is a gross oversimplification of the labor market. People aren't widgets. Their skills take a while to be developed and refined. The real story is that we do a bad job predicting the skills and training that our economy needs. Look at the healthcare occupations that are begging for workers. Moreover, we have significant geographical challenges. Consider the issue of preparing enough educators. Pennsylvania has more than enough, yet other states do a lousy job preparing and finding educators.
3. "Rather than having a shortage of skills, millions of American workers have more skills than their jobs require. That is particularly true of college-educated people, who make up 30 percent of the population today, up from 10 percent in the 1960's. They often find themselves working in sales or as office administrators, or taking jobs in hotels and restaurants, or becoming carpenters, flight attendants and word processors." Yes, the author is correct that college is no guarantee of employment success. However, it's important to remember that usually our first or second job after college is a stepping stone. The labor market is fluid.
And by the way, what's wrong with a college grad working in sales?
I'd better not continue, there's smoke coming out of my ears. Other comments/thoughts about the article are welcome.
Friday, March 24, 2006
Women in Higher Ed.: Too Many or Not Enough?
Today I came across two interesting articles about women and higher education. The first story was published in the NYTimes. An admissions officer shares her frustration with the unintended consequences of women's liberation -- women’s increased interest (and achievement) is creating a much higher university standard for women than for men. Apparently campuses are concerned with preserving “gender equity.” As a result, many well qualified girls are being placed on the waitlist while boys with comparable grades and achievement are accepted.
Just minutes after I read this article, I stumbled across an article in the National Journal about the need to increase women's pursuit of math and science degrees. In fact, Bush Administration officials are considering how they might extend Title IX law (aimed at college athletic programs) to improve gender equity in research university science departments. Although women’s pursuit of science degrees has increased, men still lead in computer science and engineering by 3-to-1 and 4-to-1, respectively.
Tuesday, March 21, 2006
Career Exploration -- Not Just for Kids
Kids aren't the only ones looking for career guidance. As baby boomers hit retirement ages, many are opting to stay in the workforce. For those seeking a retirement job, AARP has a few suggestions: http://www.aarp.org/bulletin/yourlife/0905_sidebar_2.html
Monday, March 13, 2006
Fun and Games
I came across this list of old fashioned job titles and thought they were worth sharing. (I like to use this as a trivia game when presenting to student audiences.)
Do you know what these people did for a living?
Town husband, tinkerer, ratoner, streaker, skinker, loblolly boy, honeydipper, hello girl, bookman?
A town husband was employed by the parish to collect money from fathers of illegitimate children for their upkeep. A tinkerer was a traveling repairman. A streaker prepared bodies for burial. A skinker was a tapster in an ale house. A ratoner was a rat catcher. A loblolly boy was a ship's doctor's assistant or errand boy. A honey dipper extracted raw sewage from out-houses. A hello girl was a telephone employee in the early 1900s. Finally, a bookman was a student.
Doesn't this make you love your job?
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