Page 30 - Considering College
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According to The History of the Jews from the Babylonian Captivity to the Present Time, Rabbi
       Judah said, “He who teacheth not his son a trade, does as if he taught him to be a thief.”


       This proverbial reflection is worth a second look in a contemporary context. While traveling the

       South Plains, I found a number of examples of high schools where technical education, i.e., trade
       school or vocational education, is treated seriously and provides great benefit to students and the

       extended community. Lubbock Cooper Independent School District has a well-developed Career
       and Technical Education Division with a complete wing dedicated to arts of the hand and mind.


       Unfortunately many perceive vocational education to be for those poor souls who can’t think and
       therefore must do — a parochial and condescending view of professions of craft. The marketplace

       of skill is changing that perspective. Certifications in Automotive Service Excellence, Digital and
       Interactive Media, Microsoft Office Specialists, Career Safe OSHA, the American Welding Society

       and Serve Safe, to name a few, are programs that prepare students for useful careers with free-
       market value.


       Not a single one of these certifications precludes the possibility of a student pursuing a bachelor’s
       degree in the future. Recently, a young woman with six years of welding experience was accepted

       into our mechanical engineering program at WTAMU. The combination of vocational skills and
       engineering problem-solving acumen will uniquely qualify this young woman for a career in a way

       that a traditional engineering graduate could only hope for.

       Unfortunately many perceive vocational education to be for those poor souls

      who can’t think and therefore must do — a parochial and condescending view

         of professions of craft. The marketplace of skill is changing that perspective.




       Likewise,  I  toured  Lubbock  ISD’s  Career  and  Technical  Education  Center.  Many  of  the  crafts
       taught  there  will  have  a  valuable  impact  on  the  lives  of  students.  Lubbock  ISD  uses  a  series  of

       cluster areas to prepare students for jobs. The arts, A/V production and communications, business
       management,  health  science,  hospitality  and  tourism,  human  services,  information  technology
       and  manufacturing,  are  a  few  of  the  clusters  in  which  a  student  may  enroll.  The  facilities,

       professionalism of teachers and abilities of students were impressive.


       This commitment to vocational education is growing nationally. In rural school districts, many
       students are first in their family to attend college and come from homes where the practice of craft

       is the norm. Additionally, for rural students from farms and ranches, working with their hands is a
       given and not disparaged as something below anyone’s dignity. There is nobility in work and an

       appreciation for being able to “do” something. This view warrants lifelong pursuit.
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