Jessamine County Schools: Preparing Students for the Future

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Jessamine County Schools: Preparing Students for the Future

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What do these terms mean to students in Jessamine County, Kentucky? ... What will it take for Jessamine County to compete in the Knowledge Economy? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Jessamine County Schools: Preparing Students for the Future


1
Jessamine County SchoolsPreparing Students for
the Future
  • Jessamine County Schools
  • February 9, 2005

2
  • What does the future hold?

3
Whats tomorrow look like for science?
  • KSTC Survey of Critical Technologies
  • From the Preface
  • The economy is being transformed by many
    exciting new technologies emerging from research
    labs worldwide which must be introduced
    appropriately into learning experiences at
    various levels throughout the education
    enterprise.

4
  • The 25 terms

5
(No Transcript)
6
  • Bioinformatics
  • Biomaterials
  • Biopolymers
  • Bioremediation
  • Biotechnology

7
  • Celestial mining
  • Data mining
  • E-Business
  • Fuel cell
  • Gene therapy

8
  • Genomics
  • Green technology
  • Intellectual property
  • Nanotechnology
  • Natural products

9
  • Proteomics
  • Quantum computing
  • Recombinant DNA
  • Smart materials
  • Stem cells

10
  • What do these terms mean to students in Jessamine
    County, Kentucky?
  • Without a commitment to innovative education
    solutions, those terms will continue to mean very
    little to your students.

11
In the innovation ecosystem, there are three
foundational requirements The quality of the
labor pool The societys capacity to take risks,
especially for long-term investment The
continual creation of an infrastructure that
anticipates future innovation
12
  • Four observations to consider
  • 1. Kentucky is unprepared and is not adequately
    preparing for a knowledge-based economy.
  • 2. Our future as a state depends on our
    preparation.
  • 3. There are solutions.
  • 4. We all have a role to play in providing
    solutions.

13
  • What if we make it more personal . . .
  • 1. Jessamine County students are not prepared,
    and like most students in Kentucky, are not being
    adequately prepared to live in the midst of a
    knowledge-based economy.
  • This regions future is dependent on that
    preparation.
  • 3. There are solutions to help Jessamine County,
    its students and this region.
  • 4. You each have a key role to play in providing
    solutions.

14
Regions that accumulate the most human capital
will prosper in the 21st century economy.
Source Strategic Plan for the Office for the New
Economy 2002
15
Kentuckys ability to sustain and propel a 21st
century Knowledge-based economy is dependent on
intellectual capital.
16
  • 3 questions that often accompany education
    change
  • 3. How do we change our schools?
  • 2. What needs to be done?
  • 1. Why change our schools?

17
Observation 1
1. Kentucky is unprepared and is not adequately
preparing for a knowledge-based economy.
18
Current data paint a bleak picture for our
future. . . Source US Census Data, 2000
19
With regards to the number of adult Kentuckians
with less than a 9th grade education . . .
20
  • US average 7.4
  • KY average 11.7
  • 110 KY counties above the national average

21
  • Adults with less than a 9th grade education
  • US Average 7.4
  • Oldham 4.8
  • Boone 4.8
  • Fayette 5.1
  • Jefferson 5.1

22
  • US Average 7.4
  • Magoffin 28.5
  • Clinton 29.3
  • Clay 31.9
  • Owsley 33.8

23
  • US average 7.4
  • KY average 11.7
  • Wilmore 4.6
  • Jessamine County 8.7

24
Counties exceeding the national rate (7.4) for
more than a 9th grade education among adults 25
10/120 counties
25
With regards to adult Kentuckians who have at
least a high school diploma . . .
26
Adults (25 and over) with a HS Diploma US
average 80.4 KY average 74.1 109 KY
counties below the national average
27
  • Adults with at least a HS diploma
  • U.S. Average 80.4
  • Woodford 82.6
  • Boone 85.1
  • Fayette 85.8
  • Oldham 86.5

28
  • Adults with at least a HS diploma
  • U.S. Average 80.4
  • Lee 50.9
  • Magoffin 50.1
  • Clay 49.4
  • Owsley 49.2

29
  • U.S. 80.4
  • Kentucky 74.1
  • Wilmore 90.9
  • Jessamine County 78.8

30
HS Diploma by county
31
Counties at or above the national average (80.4)
for adults 25 with a high school diploma.
11/120 counties
32
With regards to the number of Kentuckians with a
college degree . . .
33
  • Adults with at least a BA
  • US average 24.4
  • KY average 20.8
  • 115 KY counties below the national average

34
BA holders
35
  • Adults with at least at least a BA
  • US Average 24.4
  • Jefferson 24.8
  • Woodford 25.9
  • Oldham 30.6
  • Fayette 35.6

36
  • Adults with at least at least a BA
  • US Average 24.4
  • Leslie 6.3
  • Lee 6.3
  • Magoffin 6.3
  • Edmonson 4.9

37
  • US average 24.4
  • KY average 20.8
  • Wilmore 51.6
  • Jessamine County 14.0

38
Counties exceeding the national average (24.4)
of adults ages 25 with 4 or more years of
college. 5/120 counties
39
BA Attainment by County in Kentucky
40
  • Where does Kentucky stand for meeting the needs
    of the 21st Century workforce?

41
  • MIT economist David Birch noted in 1983
  • Youre like a Third World country within the
    United States. Your economy is dead because
    youve got the most poorly educated work force in
    America. To become prosperous, you must improve
    your schools and colleges.

42
  • The reality is . . .
  • In 1990, Kentucky was 49th in high school
    completions and GEDs

ThinkLink
1990 Census, Adults 18-64
43
  • But that was before we began to feel the effects
    of KERA.

44
From 1990 - 2000
ThinkLink
Adults 18-64, Decennial Census 1990, 2000
45
But . . .
  • In 2000, Kentucky still ranked only 46th in high
    school completions and GEDs

Adults 18-64 2000 Census
ThinkLink
46
  • Result
  • we are a poor state with a great education
    system . . .
  • educating other peoples
    workforce.

47
  • Does Jessamine County have good schools?

48
  • Redefining the enemy
  • Jim Collins in Good to Great
  • We dont have great schools, principally because
    we have good schools.

49
  • In Kentucky we are firmly on the road
  • From Good to . . .
  • Gooder

50
  • We know our education system is not preparing
    our children to succeed in a new, technologically
    based economy.
  • Source Lexington Herald-Leader December 12, 2004

51
  • The needs of the 21st Century workforce have
    changed significantly.

52
Changes in Workforce Needs
1997
1950
Unskilled 15
Skilled 20
Skilled 65
Professional 20
Unskilled 60
Professional 20
ThinkLink
National Summit on 21st Century Skills for 21st
Century Jobs
53
1970s

1990s
2010s
54
  • What skills are important for success in the 21st
    Century?

55
  • Literacy and the ability to learn and adapt are
    the skills required for a knowledge worker.

56
Lexile Framework
  • Semantic Difficulty
  • Syntactic Complexity

57
http//www.lexile.com/DesktopDefault.aspx?viewed
tabindex6tabid181
58
Lexile Literature
  • 400 - Frog and Toad are Friends
  • 500 - The Magic School Bus Inside the Earth
  • 800 - The Adventures of Pinocchio
  • 900 - Tom Swift in the Land of Wonders
  • 1000 - Black Beauty
  • 1100 - Pride and Prejudice
  • 1200 - War and Peace
  • 1300 - Brown vs. Board of Ed.
  • 1400 - The Scarlet Letter
  • 1500 - On Ancient Medicine

59
Lexile Texts
  • 300 - My World Harcourt Brace
  • 500 - People and Places Silver Burdett Ginn
  • 700 - World Explorer The U.S. Canada Prentice
    Hall
  • 900 - World Cultures A Global Mosaic Prentice
    Hall
  • 1100 - America Pathways to Present Prentice
    Hall
  • 1300 - Psychology An Introduction Prentice Hall
  • 1500 - The Making of Memory From Molecules to
    MindDoubleday

60
Newspapers
  • 1200 USA Today
  • 1310 Associated Press
  • 1310 Chicago Tribune
  • 1320 Wall Street Journal
  • 1350 Washington Post
  • 1380 NY Times
  • 1440 Reuters

61
Personal Use
  • 1080 CD DVD Player Instructions
  • 1150 G.M. Protection Plan
  • 1150 Microsoft Windows User Manual
  • 1170 Installing Your Child Safety Seat
  • 1260 Federal Tax Form W-4
  • 1270 Application for Student Loan
  • 1280 Medical Insurance Benefit Package
  • 1360 Aetna Health Care Discount Form

62
Construction

 
63
Manufacturing

 
64
  • What about students preparing for a traditional
    college program?

65
  • With open admissions institutions, virtually
    anyone can go to college, and the vast majority
    of high school senior intend to. But about half
    who go never earn a degree 52 percent of those
    with C averages or lower in high school do not
    earn even one college credit.

66
  • High literacy levels are vital because the 21st
    Century will see a convergence of many fields
    once thought separate and once calling for
    vastly different skill levels.

67
2000

Info Tech
Nano Tech
Bio Tech
68
Info Tech

2004
Nano Tech
Bio Tech
69
Info Tech

2008
Nano Tech
Bio Tech
70
  • Remember the 25 terms for New Economy Science?
  • How are the schools in Jessamine County planning
    to respond?

71
School systems focus
Community priorities
Community opportunities
72
  • If the schools lag behind community workplace
    needs the result is lost business opportunities.
  • The parable of the pharmaceutical company

73
  • If community priorities and opportunities lag
    behind schools advances, the result is brain
    drain.
  • The example of Graves County

74
  • You are not alone . . .
  • In 1995-2000 Kentuckys largest population loss
    was in adults ages 22-29 with a BA (1398)
  • In 1995-2000, Kentuckys largest population gain
    was in adults ages 22-29 who were high school
    dropouts (6,264).

75
  • If schools and communities are not both preparing
    for the 21st century knowledge-based economy . .
    .
  • Everyone can keep doing what they are comfortable
    with because it really isnt going to matter.

76
  • However, the rest of the world is not standing
    still . . .

77
Competition for unskilled labor . . . Take a
lesson from Western Kentucky
78
  • Clinton, Kentucky recently landed 100 jobs from
    Peerless Premiere (stove maker)
  • Wages will average 8/hr instead of the 13/hr in
    Belleville, Illinois where they had been located.

Source Lexington Herald-Leader, January 27, 2005
79
  • If you look at India, China, and Russia even
    if you discount 90 percent of the people there as
    uneducated farmersyou still end up with about
    300 million people who are educated. Thats
    twice the size of the entire U.S. work force.
  • Bob Herbert, New York Times

80
  • Are you still wondering Why change the Jessamine
    County schools?

81
Observation 2
  • 2. Our success as a state is dependent on how we
    meet this challenge.

82
  • Making the necessary changes may seem like a
    heavy task . . .

83
  • The solution is not to educate students in
    Jessamine County more efficiently and effectively
    . . .
  • for the 20th century.

84
  • What can be done K-16?
  • A look at options
  • Stay the course
  • Change the course

85
Observation 3
  • 3. There are solutions to change Jessamine
    Countys position.

86
  • A key ingredient to success is . . .
  • Implementation of a common strategy among
    education, government agencies, and business.

87
  • Take time to take a look at opportunities for
    each constituency to contribute to reaching the
    common goals.

88
  • What can be done in Jessamine County to keep or
    bring back your best and brightest?

89
  • At the State level, other changes are in progress
    . . .

90
  • Refocusing Secondary Work
  • Focus on learning not time
  • End of Course assessments
  • Replacing the PreCollege Curriculum with a 21st
    Century Kentucky Curriculum
  • Extended Learning Opportunities

91
Observation 4
  • 4. We all have a role to play in the resolution
    of this problem.

92
  • What will it take for Jessamine County to compete
    in the Knowledge Economy?

93
  • What will the solutions and the commitment to the
    solutions look like?

94
  • An understanding of the connection between the
    economic health of Jessamine County and the
    quality of the school system.
  • An understanding of the importance of each
    student in each of your schools.
  • Commitment to the long-term nature of the
    solutions.

95
  • A commitment to a P-16 strategy
  • A clear understanding of the consequences of
    failure in the New Economy.

96
To thrive in this new world, it will not be
enough indeed, it will be counterproductive
simply to intensify current stimuli, policies,
management strategies and to make incremental
improvements to organizational structures and
curricula. National Innovation Initiative Final
Report
97
  • How will this community build intellectual
    capital?
  • The time is past for optimizing for efficiency
    and quality.
  • This is the time to focus on innovative
    education.

98
Changing the Essential Questions
  • We used to ask How do we change our schools to
    make them better?
  • Now we must ask How can our school systems
    provide the best learning opportunities for each
    individual student in those systems?

99

There ARE alternative ways to think about the
future of education in this community . . .
100
. . .and we must be about the business of
providing them.
101
  • ThinkLink thinking about the problem
  • Council on Postsecondary Educaiton (CPE)
  • Department for Workforce Development (
  • Dept. for Innovation and Commercialization for a
    Knowledge-Based Economy (ONE)
  • Education and Professional Standards Board (EPSB)
  • GearUp
  • Kentucky Adult Education (KYAE)
  • Kentucky Board of Education
  • Kentucky Community and Technical College System
    (KCTCS)
  • Kentucky Department of Education
  • Kentucky Education Cabinet
  • Kentucky Workforce Investment Board (KWIB)
  • Partnership for Kentucky Schools
  • TeachKentucky

102
  • Slides marked with an were drawn from
    materials of
  • Dr. Willard Daggett, International Center for
    Leadership in Education, and were used with
    permission.

103
  • For further information, contact
  • Tom Welch
  • Tom.welch_at_ky.gov or twelch_at_kde.state.ky.us
  • 502.564.4403 x 4300
  • 859.576.0878
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