4/06 - TVET Variant : CTE

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Career and Technical Education (CTE). CTE offers comprehensive technical education from entry to advanced levels for fresh students. It prepares students for a range of technical careers through a combination of foundational skills and potential progression to more complex competencies. CTE programs are designed to provide both immediate and future job opportunities, and they take place from secondary to post-secondary education settings.

Venue: Typically conducted in high schools (secondary education) and post-secondary institutions like technical colleges. CTE programs are sometimes integrated within comprehensive high schools or specialized CTE centers.

Historically, CTE can be traced as follows:

  • Who & When: In the United States, what is now called CTE began to take shape with the Smith-Hughes Act of 1917.

  • Why: The aim was to formalize and fund vocational education at the high school level to prepare students for entry into the workforce.

  • How: Over time, the term "vocational education" was largely replaced by "career and technical education" to reflect a broader educational scope and a focus on career readiness that includes college preparation.

CTE, real world example(s):

Scenario: Technology Integration in U.S. High Schools

  1. Program Setup: A high school in the USA integrates CTE focused on information technology, offering courses in coding, network administration, and cybersecurity.

  2. Industry Certification: Courses are aligned with industry certifications; which students can earn alongside their high school diplomas.

  3. Post-Graduation Paths: Graduates proceed to tech jobs, higher education in STEM fields, or start their tech enterprises.

  4. Long-Term Impact: The program boosts local tech industry growth and student career success.

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