1 / 11

Washington County Electrical Construction Program

Washington County Electrical Construction Program . Chad Secrest October 2011. Student Assessment Overview. 5-Year Plan:. In looking through Secondary Five-Year Planned Program Improvement Chart, the Electrical Program has no 5-year plan.

thisbe
Download Presentation

Washington County Electrical Construction Program

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Washington County Electrical Construction Program Chad Secrest October 2011 Student Assessment Overview

  2. 5-Year Plan: • In looking through Secondary Five-Year Planned Program Improvement Chart, the Electrical Program has no 5-year plan. • We are currently undergoing some modernization projects in our classroom to include: paint, new simulator, new fan, and newer tools/equipment. • In visiting the local ABC Chapter, I noticed that our facilities are more than adequate to accomplish the tasks required for learning the field.

  3. Class Goals: • To receive training in the electrical wiring field and become a registered apprentice electrician

  4. AS AN ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION STUDENT YOU WILL: • Learn how to wire a home • Learn how to wire stores and offices • Wire alarm systems • Actually wire a new house • Complete first year of an electrical apprenticeship

  5. THIS PROGRAM WILL PREPARE STUDENTS TO PURSUE THE FOLLOWING CAREER OPPORTUNITIES: • Residential Electrician • Commercial Electrician • Alarm Technician • Electric Motor Repair Technician • Electrical Estimator • Electrical Supervisor • Licensed Electrician • Electrical Contractor

  6. Curriculum: • NCCER (National Center for Construction Education and Research) Standards are followed. • Students enrolled in the program hope to achieve a Level 2 Electrical Apprenticeship certification.

  7. End of Course Assessment: • Student’s must pass the NCCT for the Electrical through the NCCER’s National Registry for certification and to advance to Level II. Upon completion of the Craft Level curriculum and assessments, students meet classroom instruction requirements of the related apprenticeship program(s). • www.marylandpublicschools.org

  8. PQI Data:Areas of Concern(2009-2010) • CTE Completers (-3) • Washington County Public School System needs to ensure that students are able to reach the goals of Apprenticeship Certification.

  9. PQI Data:Areas of Concern(2009-2010) • Non-Traditional Completion (-2.33) • Non-traditional enrollment – 20 Male Students to 0 Female Students. • Tools are becoming more ergonomic and Electrical Construction is a definite opportunity for female employees.

  10. PQI Data:Areas of Concern(2009-2010) • CTE Concentrators that Graduated High School (-2.35) • Our goal should be for every CTE Concentrator to graduate from High School. If just one student does not graduate, then there is room for improvement.

  11. Conclusion • The Washington County Technical High School Electrical Construction Program is structured around providing quality Electrical education for students that plan to enter the Electrical field. With the first two years of apprenticeship completed upon graduation, students are in a much better position to obtain gainful employment immediately following high school. Increasing Electrical Construction program completions and Apprenticeship certifications is priority.

More Related