Community College Pathways' Conflict

Thomas Gauthier
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As employers look past <i>grades</i> and demand <i>proficiency</i>, career and technical education must comply by offering students an integrated, robust, and holistic curriculum that focuses on educating students in mass quantities, but one that offers them a framework for individual cognitive ability and critical thinking (Hirsch, <span>2019</span>). Employers indicated that learning pathways that neglect to focus on the students' ability to think critically are irrelevant in the industry.</p><p>To maintain a contemporary teaching and learning, community colleges must advocate for change in that they must be willing to challenge the state regardless of the state's oversight of these institutions. Educational institutions that resort to the entrenchment of pathway dependency will be left behind as stakeholders seek more contemporary and flexible educational options.</p><p>Learning pathways are designed to align advisement and program selection in a more effective way to encourage completion by broadly structuring programs so that students can explore disciplines before choosing a focused discipline of study (Van Noy et al., <span>2016</span>). Pathway development began in earnest several years ago, and many community colleges did what they always do, and continue to, divide students into groups: academic versus career and technical. Indeed, the function of the institution is to educate. All education is academic at heart, even as it may impart physical or technical skills, yet for most students, ideal education results in employment. However, many community colleges tend to force students into a divide that harms the stakeholders. Students should not be forced into choosing an academic pathway or a career and technical pathway because this choice restricts their ability to learn by suppressing learning opportunities. Blended pathways allow students to experience education in a variety of ways including work-based learning, project-based learning, and competency-based learning (Moskal et al., <span>2013</span>). Flexible pathways provide students with greater mobility between programs and institutions, a greater emphasis on prior learning and work-based experience (Duarte et al., <span>2018</span>). Blended and flexible pathways are more efficient as these models offer students the ability to draw connections between competencies across disciplines and apply them to core course content, not just enabling critical thinking, but offering the opportunity to practice applying a critical thought process to project- and competency-based education (Lanford &amp; Tierney, <span>2015</span>).</p><p>A blended pathway provides students with a real-world component to learning as they experience learning from environments. This real-world connection encourages students to be open-minded about education and reinforces students' need to participate in lifelong learning to support or improve their position in society and support the economy. Linked Learning is another pathway community colleges should consider. This pathway is intended to be multidisciplinary but does not have a prescribed path. Linked Learning combines career and technical education with academic education to articulate practical skill application (Lanford &amp; Tierney, <span>2015</span>) and is focused on work-based learning, high expectations, personalized support, project, and competency-based learning, and aims to reduce the stigma typically associated with career and technical education (Hamilton, <span>2020</span>).</p><p>Students enroll in a community college for various reasons, and they certainly do not know whether they should follow an academic pathway or career pathway. Choosing the wrong pathway often results in frustration and failure. Many community colleges articulate credentials as a means to an end, but good community colleges articulate a holistic education as a means to an end focusing more on student's education and less on specific credentials. While many people use a community college as a steppingstone to additional education, these intuitions must work for the stakeholder while upholding the school’s values. Therefore, while community colleges do many things well (Osterman, <span>2011</span>), they should not contribute to the diversion effect, but strive to contribute to the democratization of education (Leigh &amp; Gill, <span>2003</span>; Long &amp; Kurlaender, <span>2009</span>) which includes the appropriate development of CTE curriculum. An appropriate CTE curriculum prepares students for work with the skills required for sustainable employability and growth and the opportunity for continued education.</p><p>Community colleges must be less interested in phase one employment figures or the assessment stage of employment (Casto, <span>2000</span>) and more interested in career adaptability and employability skills (Lamback &amp; Cahill, <span>2020</span>). As employers continue to question the validity of a community college transcript (Gauthier, <span>2020</span>), these institutions must focus less on dividing students arbitrarily and focus more on their holistic education.</p>","PeriodicalId":101234,"journal":{"name":"The Journal of Competency-Based Education","volume":"6 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-02-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1002/cbe2.1232","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Journal of Competency-Based Education","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cbe2.1232","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

As employers update their hiring practices, such as project-based and competency-based hiring, community colleges must rethink their career and technical program content and facilitation. Community colleges are public 2-year institutions of higher learning conferring associate degrees, certificates, and industry-related credentials. Florida is an example where community colleges were rebranded as state colleges and issue bachelor's degrees while continuing to facilitate a community colleges' mission of access and completion.

Community colleges are on the front line in preparing a competent workforce with the knowledge that can transcend various domains. As employers look past grades and demand proficiency, career and technical education must comply by offering students an integrated, robust, and holistic curriculum that focuses on educating students in mass quantities, but one that offers them a framework for individual cognitive ability and critical thinking (Hirsch, 2019). Employers indicated that learning pathways that neglect to focus on the students' ability to think critically are irrelevant in the industry.

To maintain a contemporary teaching and learning, community colleges must advocate for change in that they must be willing to challenge the state regardless of the state's oversight of these institutions. Educational institutions that resort to the entrenchment of pathway dependency will be left behind as stakeholders seek more contemporary and flexible educational options.

Learning pathways are designed to align advisement and program selection in a more effective way to encourage completion by broadly structuring programs so that students can explore disciplines before choosing a focused discipline of study (Van Noy et al., 2016). Pathway development began in earnest several years ago, and many community colleges did what they always do, and continue to, divide students into groups: academic versus career and technical. Indeed, the function of the institution is to educate. All education is academic at heart, even as it may impart physical or technical skills, yet for most students, ideal education results in employment. However, many community colleges tend to force students into a divide that harms the stakeholders. Students should not be forced into choosing an academic pathway or a career and technical pathway because this choice restricts their ability to learn by suppressing learning opportunities. Blended pathways allow students to experience education in a variety of ways including work-based learning, project-based learning, and competency-based learning (Moskal et al., 2013). Flexible pathways provide students with greater mobility between programs and institutions, a greater emphasis on prior learning and work-based experience (Duarte et al., 2018). Blended and flexible pathways are more efficient as these models offer students the ability to draw connections between competencies across disciplines and apply them to core course content, not just enabling critical thinking, but offering the opportunity to practice applying a critical thought process to project- and competency-based education (Lanford & Tierney, 2015).

A blended pathway provides students with a real-world component to learning as they experience learning from environments. This real-world connection encourages students to be open-minded about education and reinforces students' need to participate in lifelong learning to support or improve their position in society and support the economy. Linked Learning is another pathway community colleges should consider. This pathway is intended to be multidisciplinary but does not have a prescribed path. Linked Learning combines career and technical education with academic education to articulate practical skill application (Lanford & Tierney, 2015) and is focused on work-based learning, high expectations, personalized support, project, and competency-based learning, and aims to reduce the stigma typically associated with career and technical education (Hamilton, 2020).

Students enroll in a community college for various reasons, and they certainly do not know whether they should follow an academic pathway or career pathway. Choosing the wrong pathway often results in frustration and failure. Many community colleges articulate credentials as a means to an end, but good community colleges articulate a holistic education as a means to an end focusing more on student's education and less on specific credentials. While many people use a community college as a steppingstone to additional education, these intuitions must work for the stakeholder while upholding the school’s values. Therefore, while community colleges do many things well (Osterman, 2011), they should not contribute to the diversion effect, but strive to contribute to the democratization of education (Leigh & Gill, 2003; Long & Kurlaender, 2009) which includes the appropriate development of CTE curriculum. An appropriate CTE curriculum prepares students for work with the skills required for sustainable employability and growth and the opportunity for continued education.

Community colleges must be less interested in phase one employment figures or the assessment stage of employment (Casto, 2000) and more interested in career adaptability and employability skills (Lamback & Cahill, 2020). As employers continue to question the validity of a community college transcript (Gauthier, 2020), these institutions must focus less on dividing students arbitrarily and focus more on their holistic education.

社区大学路径的冲突
随着雇主更新他们的招聘方式,比如基于项目和基于能力的招聘,社区大学必须重新考虑他们的职业和技术项目的内容和便利。社区学院是公立的两年制高等教育机构,授予副学士学位、证书和行业相关证书。佛罗里达州就是一个例子,社区学院被重新命名为州立大学,并颁发学士学位,同时继续促进社区学院的准入和完成使命。社区大学在培养具有跨领域知识的合格劳动力方面处于第一线。随着雇主关注过去的成绩和对熟练程度的要求,职业和技术教育必须通过为学生提供一个综合的、强大的、全面的课程来满足这一要求,该课程侧重于大规模教育学生,但也为他们提供了一个培养个人认知能力和批判性思维的框架(Hirsch, 2019)。雇主们指出,忽视学生批判性思考能力的学习途径在这个行业是不相关的。为了保持当代的教学,社区大学必须倡导变革,因为他们必须愿意挑战国家,而不管国家对这些机构的监督。当利益相关者寻求更现代、更灵活的教育选择时,诉诸路径依赖的教育机构将被抛在后面。学习路径旨在以更有效的方式协调建议和课程选择,通过广泛的课程结构来鼓励完成,以便学生在选择重点学习学科之前可以探索学科(Van Noy et al., 2016)。途径发展在几年前就开始了,许多社区大学一如既往地把学生分成不同的组:学术组、职业组和技术组。事实上,学校的功能就是教育。所有的教育本质上都是学术性的,即使它可能传授身体或技术技能,但对大多数学生来说,理想的教育结果是就业。然而,许多社区大学倾向于迫使学生进入伤害利益相关者的鸿沟。学生不应该被迫选择学术道路或职业和技术道路,因为这种选择通过抑制学习机会来限制他们的学习能力。混合路径允许学生以多种方式体验教育,包括基于工作的学习、基于项目的学习和基于能力的学习(Moskal等人,2013)。灵活的路径为学生提供了更大的项目和机构之间的流动性,更加强调先前的学习和基于工作的经验(Duarte等人,2018)。混合和灵活的路径更有效,因为这些模式为学生提供了在跨学科能力之间建立联系并将其应用于核心课程内容的能力,不仅能够培养批判性思维,还提供了将批判性思维过程应用于项目和能力为基础的教育的实践机会(Lanford &Tierney, 2015)。混合路径为学生提供了一个真实世界的学习组成部分,因为他们从环境中学习。这种现实世界的联系鼓励学生对教育持开放态度,并加强学生参与终身学习的需要,以支持或提高他们在社会和经济中的地位。关联学习是社区大学应该考虑的另一个途径。这个途径旨在是多学科的,但没有规定的路径。关联学习将职业和技术教育与学术教育相结合,以阐明实际技能的应用(Lanford &Tierney, 2015),并专注于基于工作的学习,高期望,个性化支持,项目和基于能力的学习,旨在减少通常与职业和技术教育相关的污名(Hamilton, 2020)。学生们因为各种各样的原因进入社区大学,他们当然不知道他们应该走学术道路还是职业道路。选择错误的道路往往会导致挫折和失败。许多社区学院将证书作为达到目的的手段,但好的社区学院将全人教育作为达到目的的手段,更多地关注学生的教育,而不是特定的证书。虽然许多人把社区大学作为接受额外教育的跳板,但这些直觉必须为利益相关者服务,同时维护学校的价值观。因此,虽然社区大学在很多方面做得很好(Osterman, 2011),但它们不应该促成分流效应,而应该努力为教育民主化做出贡献(Leigh &;吉尔,2003;长,Kurlaender, 2009),其中包括CTE课程的适当发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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