Teaching and Learning Employability Skills in Career and Technical Education: Industry, Educator, and Student Perspectives

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This book examines how industry-desired employability skills―or “soft skills”―are taught and learned in high school career and technical education (CTE) engineering and engineering technology programs. Identifying, recruiting, and keeping workers with strong personal and interpersonal skills is a constant challenge for STEM employers who need to hire young workers to replace an aging technical workforce. To answer the call, teachers interviewed explained that they maintain regimented daily classroom routines that include individual and small group hands-on activities and projects. In turn, their students explain learning personal responsibility, work ethic, teamwork, leadership, conflict management, and social skills in the classroom. Narratives from the workforce and classroom interweave to put employability skills frameworks into action.

Author(s): Will Tyson
Series: Palgrave Studies in Urban Education
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 171
City: Cham

Front Matter
1. Introduction: Employability Skills in the Twenty-First Century Workforce
2. Background and Methodology
3. Core Elements of Work Ethic
4. Flexibility and Interpersonal Skills
5. Personal Responsibility and Work Ethic
6. Interpersonal Skills
7. Projects and Activities That Promote Employability Skills
8. Eyes Toward the Future
Back Matter