Labor Acts
to Kick-Start Career-Tech Education for Infrastructure Careers
The AFT and NABTU have forged a
nationwide partnership to jointly promote apprenticeships and develop and
distribute information to guidance counselors to advance career and technical
education in both CTE and non-CTE schools. The two unions, representing
millions of members across the education and trade sectors, will collaborate in
the drafting of K-12 curriculum and lesson plans to help students build their
careers.
Many CTE students, parents and
educators are unaware of the opportunities for registered apprenticeships and
middle-class careers in the building trades. The novel program connects two
high-quality education opportunities: our nation’s CTE schools and the building
trades’ registered apprenticeship programs.
This partnership will help spread
the word to U.S. high school students about the direct link between CTE and
career opportunities in infrastructure construction projects, many of which are
supported by teachers’ or building trades’ pension funds. The program will be
informed by NABTU’s Multi-Craft Core Curriculum (MC3), a comprehensive
pre-apprenticeship curriculum that was awarded the U.S. Department of Labor’s
Registered Apprenticeship Innovator and Trailblazer Award.
The collaboration kicked off at
the recent AFT summer TEACH conference for educators, where attendees got to
try out the latest virtual reality training platform used to teach apprentices
real-world crane operation and control skills. Teachers came away with a strong
appreciation for the range of modern apprenticeships that the building trades
offer.
AFT President Randi Weingarten
said: “Millions of American high school students are eager to learn
the valuable skills necessary to be the builders of our roads, bridges,
airports, schools and energy grids. They aspire to careers rebuilding our
nation—and the AFT, alongside NABTU, is turning that aspiration into action.
“At schools like Transit Tech in
Brooklyn, N.Y., a CTE-focused education leads directly to apprenticeships and
good jobs. At the same time, many public pension funds are invested in
rebuilding America’s infrastructure. Working together, we can train the next
generation for great jobs, while using pension funds to help create those jobs.
That helps fuel an economy that works for all.”
NABTU President Sean McGarvey
said: “We are thrilled to be partners with the AFT in this exciting
initiative to develop the skilled workforce of the future via the advancement
of career and technical education in America’s public schools. As our nation
gets set to embark upon the rebuilding and repair of our critical
infrastructure systems, this partnership will be at the forefront of making
sure that career training opportunities, via apprenticeship-readiness and
formal apprenticeship education and training, are an integral part of the
equation.”
Follow AFT President Randi Weingarten: http://twitter.com/rweingarten
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