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Free College Tuition & Certifications: Senate Bill 155. Lisa Beck – Kansas Board of Regents Martin Kollman – Kansas Department of Education. Kansas State Information. 2.9 million residents 450,000 students in public schools (approx.) 69,675 - 11 th & 12 th grade students (approx.) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Lisa Beck – Kansas Board of RegentsMartin Kollman – Kansas Department of Education
2.9 million residents 450,000 students in public schools (approx.) 69,675 - 11th & 12th grade students
(approx.) 286 public school districts 177 private-accredited districts 19 community colleges 7 universities
Kansas’ secondary Career & Technical Education (CTE) Division has adopted the National Career Clusters model of 16 career clusters and has currently developed 31 pathways within these clusters.
In 2014-15 we will expand the Ag cluster from 3 to 8 pathways to have 36 available to school districts.
Participant students must have 1 credit, while Concentrators much have 3 credits.
2013-14: 16 Clusters - 31 Pathways Total in KS – 2298
Agriculture – 361 Architecture &
Construction – 301 Arts, AV, Comm. – 241 Business Management –
94 Education & Training – 65 Finance – 179 Govt. & Public Admin. – 10
Health Science - 62 Hospitality & Tourism – 97 Human Services - 333 Information Tech. – 208 Law, Public Safety – 15 Manufacturing – 102 Marketing - 88 STEM – 92 Transportation - 50
CTE is identified under rigor, but can be linked to many other components.
CTE includes:◦ Integration of CTE and Academics ◦ Partnerships ◦ Career Awareness and Guidance◦ Support and Recognition ◦ Innovation◦ Long Term Planning◦ Instructional Practice◦ Professional Learning
Student Tuition Support ($8.75 million)◦Tuition paid for all KBOR approved CTE
courses School Transportation Costs ($500,000) Incentives to High Schools for Certificates Earned in Key Occupations ($1.5 million)◦$1,000 for graduates with credentials
Funding for Marketing/Outreach ($50,000)
Key Components of SB 155
Improve education by increasing the percentage of students who are career and college ready upon high school graduation
Improve CTE with additional funding
Result = SB 155
Senate Bill 155
Promote SB155 Opportunities Inform & Change Image of CTE
Targeted Groups: General Public Parents Students Academic Teachers Counselors Administration
Make Materials & Information Available
Posters Videos Tri-fold Brochure
(also in Spanish) TV and Theatre Spots
Social MediaFAQsFact SheetOrder Form
Sparks Will Fly - Welder Climbing the Corporate Ladder - Lineman Break the Mold - Nurse Paid to Play – Game Developer
Promote your programs locally…
◦ Pathways offered◦ Number of students◦ Careers available◦ Earnings in region and state◦ Training & education needed
Who to promote to…◦ Local newspapers◦ Area businesses◦ Parents◦ Middle school students
Collaborate with…◦ Businesses & advisory
committee◦ Post-secondary institutions◦ Workforce & county
agencies
Tuition paid for any Kansas high school student taking KBOR approved CTE courses
Students may be charged for fees and books but not tuition
Must be Postsecondary Tiered Technical Courses
SB 155 Student Tuition
Students more likely to stay in secondary Students more likely to transition to post-
secondary after 3 visits to campus Transcripted credit follows students to any
college rather than articulated to specific college
High schools and colleges collaborate more often and at a higher level – PARTNERSHIPS KEY
Parents are more accepting of CTE with college credit being earned
Dual enrollment/Concurrent Credit is the norm
Pass entrance criteria Must meet academic requirements Generally junior and senior level students Public and private secondary students
eligible Can enroll in all available programs Post-secondary reports student participation
to KBOR
Students can take CTE courses college or dual credit.
Courses offered by college faculty or postsecondary approved high school teachers
Courses can be offered at the Kansas high school, college, or distance education
Can be during normal school hours, after school, or summer break
Public school transportation during school hours is covered using mileage formula
Amount varies depending on vehicle used from school fleet
No special insurance or coverage outside of normal contract for school transportation
Block schedules tend to be favored for student participation during school hours
Outside school hours is the student’s responsibility
19
11,750,000
23,750,000*
SB155 Credentials
High Wage, High Demand Occupations determined by KDOL
Wage is 200% above KS poverty (approximately $34,000 or more)
List of Qualifying Credentials (31) for $1,000 High School Incentivehttp://www.kansasregents.org/
governors_cte_initiative
Agriculture Construction Machining Welding Health Automotive Computer Support Energy
*Reviewed & Revised Annually by Labor, KSDE, & KBOR
Student earns Credential by December following Graduation
Credential Completion Form Submitted in June to KSDE (after graduation)
Once confirmed by KSDE, KBOR sends the $1,000 to the student’s High School
711 Certifications Earned 2012-13 ($711,000 Total)
Health - 81% (CNA) Manufacturing - 8% (AWS CW) Construction – 7% (NCCER) Automotive – 3% (ASET) Other – 1% (CDL) 694 by Public Students (108 Districts) 17 by Private Students
KANSASWORKS.com/careerzoom
kansasregents.org/governors_cte_initiative
ksde.org > CTE > CTE Newsletters > SB 155 Reference Materials
Lisa BeckAssociate Director Career Technical Education
Kansas Board of [email protected]
Martin KollmanEducation Program Consultant/ RPOS Coordinator / Perkins Consultant
Kansas State Department of [email protected]