Career and Technical Education as a Bridge to High School English Learner Success

 
 
 
 

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 2023
3:00 P.M. ET (New York, D.C.) / 2:00 P.M. CT (Chicago) / 1:00 P.M. MT (Denver) / 12:00 P.M. PT (Los Angeles)

SPEAKERS:
Altagracia “Grace” Delgado, Executive Director, Multilingual Services, Aldine Independent School District (ISD), Texas

Brooke Martin, Executive Director, Career and Technical Education, Aldine ISD
Julie Sugarman, Senior Policy Analyst for PreK-12 Education,    Migration Policy Institute

 

LOCATION
MPI WEBCAST

Career and technical education (CTE) is frequently touted as an effective strategy to encourage high school students to persist to graduation and set themselves on a path to jobs that pay a family-sustaining wage. For English Learners (ELs), who disproportionately come from low-income families and are less likely than their peers to graduate on time, participating in CTE can be especially rewarding—if they have meaningful access to such classes and support to successfully complete them. Federal rules and state oversight play important roles in ensuring ELs are allowed to enroll in CTE, but challenges to serving them are numerous, from student schedules already packed with required classes to faculty unprepared to meet unique learning needs.

ELs’ meaningful participation in CTE requires a holistic approach to program planning and student recruitment. For example, school counselors—who play a gatekeeping role in determining the courses students can access—can benefit from working closely with EL specialists to understand student and family perspectives. Regular, two-way communication with higher education and industry partners ensures that high school staff understand local opportunities, and that those partners are ready to take advantage of the assets current and former EL students bring with them and to support their continued career growth.

This webinar marks the release of a new report from MPI’s National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy on CTE and ELs that describes federal and state policies that support EL inclusion in CTE, as well as local challenges and opportunities. The conversation will highlight a Texas school district program in which collaborative practices between the CTE and multilingual departments are taking place to ensure ELs are appropriately supported. 

 

For more information
[email protected]
202-266-1929
www.migrationpolicy.org

Follow Us

Migration Policy Institute
1275 K St. NW 
Suite 800
Washington, District of Columbia 
xxxxxx

Unsubscribe or Manage Your Preferences