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Project Lead the Way and A New Paradigm for Community Colleges Ron Way Dean Emeritus El Camino...

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Project Lead the Way and A New Paradigm for Community Colleges Ron Way Dean Emeritus El Camino College [email protected]
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Project Lead the Wayand

A New Paradigm for Community Colleges

Ron WayDean EmeritusEl Camino [email protected]

What is the Problem?

The shortage of engineers and technicians is growing.

The candidate pool is shrinking.

Traditional pathways to higher education CTE programs are failing.

Are we training the engineers and technicians we need?

•There are currently 1.3 million engineering/engineering technology jobs available in the U.S. without trained people to fill them.

•According to the Federal Government we will need 15 million engineers and technology workers by 2020.

What are we doing about it?

• Robotics and automation training.

• New Engineering Technology program based on PLTW curricula.

•Partnering with K12 Schools to offer robotics & PLTW.

Why Robotics?

•It’s fun.

•Competitions: Lego League, VEX, FIRST

•It’s relevant. Robotics integrates computers, manufacturing, electronics and automation.

2003 Hawthorne Engineering Academy (CPA) 2004 Attempt to match PLTW to existing courses 2005 Developed 5 college level PLTW courses 2006 Joined PLTW Post-Secondary program 2006 Began offering Saturday PLTW courses 2007 Began offering weekday PLTW courses

PLTW @ ECC Program Progression

2007 SB-70 “Quickstart” Grant to replicate model 2007 to 2009, sponsored 7 high schools

– Faculty training – Start-up costs– Mentor program– More than 1,000 high school students enrolled

in PLTW courses in the South Bay

PLTW @ ECC Program Progression

2008 ETEC Program Approval Submitted– Two A.S. degree options– Two certificate options

2008 Eight HS Articulation Agreements 2008-2010 CTE I, CTE II, CTE III Collaborative Grants 2009/2010 Implemented bussing plan (bring HS students

to ECC in the afternoon) (Chevron funded) 2010 Added two new high schools (Chevron funded) 2010 Total high school student enrollment tops 1,400.

PLTW Program Progression

Traditional = high school teacher, high school course– Can lead to college credit through articulation agreements

Concurrent = high school student receives college credit upon completion of course on high school campus

Apportionment sharing Fall 2007 thru Spring 2009 No apportionment sharing Fall 2009 to present Fall 2010 at ECC = 600 concurrent, 800 traditional

Traditional vs. Concurrent Enrollment

Concurrent enrollment requires compliance and ISA’s Instructional Service Agreements (ISA’s) Courses must be publicized and open to the public High school teacher must meet CC minimum quals At ECC, teachers are hired, but paid by high school CC course outline must exist and be followed CC in control of instruction Students must re-enroll each semester

Concurrent Enrollment Challenges

Tech Prep and Articulation

Tech Prep Supporting Role High School to CC Articulation Process CC to CSU Articulation Programs of Study (Perkins IV)

Industry Advisory Committee Tech Prep Advisory Committee Engineers mentor classes and students Northrop Grumman Foundation Grants Chevron support through PLTW Inc.

PLTW Industry Support

Dr. Stephanie Rodriguez, DeanIndustry and Technology Division(310) 660-3593 [email protected]

Karen HessTech Prep Coordinator(310) 660-3593 ext. [email protected]

Ron Way, Dean Emeritus(310) 660-3593 ext. [email protected]

For Additional Information


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