The National Association of State Boards of Education (NASBE) and the National Skills Coalition (NSC), two co-conveners of the Future of CTE Summit, recently released two new reports of interest to the CTE community.
The first, “Toward a Better Balance: Bolstering the Second ‘C’ in College and Career Readiness†from NASBE is the result of the organization’s yearlong study group comprised of state education board members. The group examined the policies and programs that prepare students for both college and career. Nebraska State CTE Director Rich Katt and NASDCTEc’s Executive Director Kimberly Green were among the experts who presented to the group.
The study group recognized that career readiness has been largely forgotten within the college and career readiness (CCR) agenda, and called for state boards of education to leverage their unique and important role to reexamine their states’ CCR infrastructure that supports and values college and career readiness equally.
The group’s recommendations include:
- Building knowledge and understanding of postsecondary, business and workforce initiatives: Understand how your education and workforce systems are governed, funded and operate, and further, how and whether they are connected or operate in silos.
- Engage with a broad spectrum of stakeholders to define career readiness: The confusion around what it means to be career ready has muddled the state policies and programs that are intended to advance the full CCR agenda. Defining these terms clearly, and with a broad array of stakeholders, is the first step to ensuring rigor, equity and alignment.
- Ensure state board policies value career readiness: State boards should reexamine its host of policies and programs that are the “bread and butter†of state boards’ work, and determine whether they truly value career readiness including standards, assessments, accountability, and teacher preparation and professional development.
Sector Partnership Policy Toolkit
NSC has released a toolkit for state policymakers to use when considering how to support local sector partnerships through funding, technical assistance and/or program initiatives. Earlier this year, NSC released a 50-state scan of sector partnership policies and found that 21 states have such policies through at least one of those three key areas. Only 10 states have policies with all three components.
The toolkit is designed to help states establish, strengthen, or scale-up their existing policies. The toolkit includes:
- Guidance on key elements of a robust state sector partnership policy;
- Case studies of Massachusetts, Colorado and Maryland with policies and examples of the local partnerships they support; and
- A legislative template, which can also be used for an executive order.
Andrea Zimmermann, State Policy Associate