Georgia Career Academies Blur Lines Between Education and Workforce Training
1. Expanding Horizons: Matthew Gambill,
executive director of the Georgia Association
for Career and Technical Education, at
Gordon College and Career Academy in
Calhoun
michaelheape.com
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Blurring the Lines
By Ellen Berman
The grinding of a food processor. The roar of a
welding machine. The soft whir of a blood
pressure cuff.
These are some of the sounds emanating from
high school classrooms in the 37 college and
career academies throughout Georgia. Across the
state, more than 20,000 students are
supplementing their core classes with hands-on
preparation for the workplace.
The career academy movement came to fruition
in 2006 when Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle helped initiate
the program under the auspices of the Technical
College System of Georgia. Grants of about $3
million each are made available to interested
school districts as an incentive to open an
academy, which are actually specialized charter
schools representing a collaborative partnership
between high schools, colleges and local
businesses. Since each academy is part of the
local school system, the curriculum can respond
to the particular workforce needs and resources
of the area.
“We encourage our members and teachers to have a robust business and industry advisory
council to offer feedback on the curriculum,” says Matthew Gambill, executive director of the
Georgia Association for Career and Technical Education (GACTE). “We want to make sure
teachers and the GACTE members are aware of the big world of commerce outside the
classroom.”
The academies emphasize work-based learning and technical training for a seamless
transition into the workforce. Students are also encouraged to take advantage of dual
enrollment at local colleges or technical schools, in line with Cagle’s vision that every Georgia
high school student acquires some post-secondary training before graduating.
GEORGIA TREND / DECEMBER 2016 / BLURRING THE LINES
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2. Popular fields of study include engineering, biomedicine, culinary arts, weld- ing, certified
nurse assisting, cosmetology, graphic arts and healthcare sciences. Course work in some fields
is designed to teach the skills necessary for industry certification.
“Everything we do is above and beyond what we offer in the regular high school, from the labs,
the level of equipment, the technology and the commitment we have received from the school
system and the community,” says John Uesseler, CEO of the Academy for Advanced Studies in
Henry County.
Career-relevant
That “above and beyond” starts with top-notch physical resources. At the Academy for
Advanced Studies, one lab has a full manufacturing line with operable robotics and
programmable controllers. At Liberty College and Career Academy in Hinesville, the culinary
lab is outfitted as a commercial restaurant; two health labs are equipped with medical beds
and manikins; the graphic design department has fully operable screen-printing machines;
and the construction and engineering labs include fabrication and 3-D printing equipment.
The academies and other schools that offer a Career, Technical and Agricultural Education
(CTAE) pathway boast graduation rates of 94.9 percent for students in those programs,
compared to 78.8 percent for all Georgia high schools. Local businesses play a key role in this
vein.
“Well-paying jobs are out there, and we’re trying to get students to realize that a four-year
degree may not be relevant to your career or the best way to spend your time,” says Herschel
Arant, vice president of engineering services at Central Georgia Electric Membership Corp.
(CGEMC) and board chair for the Academy for Advanced Studies, “while spending 12 months
at a tech college may prepare you for a fine career in a craft that bodes well for your future.”
EMC has a lineman apprenticeship program in the works and is excited about the potential for
the academies to help fill what he calls a “skills gap” in Georgia’s workforce.
“We have a mismatch between the skills and training of the workforce and the job needs of
employers,” Arant says. “The academies connect two worlds, rigorous training and relevant
learning experiences, that move students toward careers that are needed now and in the
future.”
Flooring manufacturer Mohawk Industries is doing its part to fill the skills gap at the Gordon
County College and Career Academy, where it is supplying a full-time employee to teach the
multi-disciplinary field of mechatronics to engineering students to assure instruction is
pertinent to long-term employment needs.
Liberty Regional Medical Center has opened its doors to allow Liberty College and Career
Academy students to shadow professionals in the surgical or labor and delivery wing; students
also work with residents at the Coastal Manor nursing home. And at Athens Community
Career Academy, students can gain work experience with Caterpillar, Zaxby’s, Eaton Corp. and
UGA, among others.
One Size Doesn’t Fit All
But the academies do not exist solely to scoot high school students directly into jobs.
“What’s interesting is that when they come here, they want a skill for the workforce, but once
they start taking classes, many students find they want to earn a degree,” says Karisa Young,
CEO of Liberty College and Career Academy. “We work with them to explore what education is
required for a particular career.”
“We are doing a disservice to our students in this region to promote the one-size-fits-all
college prep diploma,” says Shelly Smith, a former English teacher and CEO of Southeastern
Early College and Career Academy (SECCA), which serves Montgomery County High School,
3. Toombs County High School, Treutlen High School and Vidalia Comprehensive High School.
At SECCA, automotive services is second in popularity to ROTC; the ROTC instructor travels
to each high school in the area to instruct the 180 students enrolled in that program.
Stories of the academies’ life-changing effects abound. One SECCA student with behavioral
problems interned at the USPET Nutrition plant in Lyons, where he worked in the IT
department creating badges and flyers for internal operations.
“He realized that when you are in school they have to be nice to you, but that at USPET, as he
put it, ‘nobody had to be nice to me; I had to earn it,’” Smith says. USPET subsequently offered
the young man a full-time job.
Liberty College and Career Academy Senior Caitlin Aughtman starts her school day with
regular high school classes, then takes the bus to work as a sous chef in the school’s
commercially equipped kitchen that includes a bistro, where students can sell their
concoctions and learn how to run a business. Her pumpkin bread recipe has become a hit with
family and friends.
But it’s not all sweetness and light in the kitchen. Chicken fabrication, involving cutting up a
whole chicken into pieces and removing the bones and fat, is one of Aughtman’s most disliked
tasks. Still, Aughtman says, “It’s so much better than school. They treat us as young adults and
as employees. They want to get us job-ready.”
For students enrolled in the financial career pathway at Henry County’s Academy for
Advanced Studies, getting a job can be as easy as walking down the hall. In a converted
classroom, Georgia United Credit Union operates the only full-service, fully operational
student-managed credit union in the nation.
The branch trains students to be customer service reps and tellers, and they are held to the
same standards as other employees. They fill out resumes, go through the selection process
and undergo professional training.
“In our last group we had a student who was so shy she would barely talk to anyone,” says
Branch Manager Meg Norrell, “but when she graduated in May you wouldn’t have known; she
opened and blossomed and became one of our member service providers and later helped
train incoming students.”
The branch has been so successful that other academies are planning to follow suit.
Academics First
Academies may be preparing students for the workplace, but a firm academic foundation is
essential to the training they offer.
“It starts to resonate with students who say ‘oh, so this is why I needed to learn that geometry,
so when I frame up the house the walls are square,’” says CGEMC’s Arant.
“Some of the kids we work with are from lower-income families and might be pressured to
drop out of school to get a job,” says Kevin Ingram, USPET operations manager. “The
academy program puts the proper emphasis on balancing education with work life. And we
give them a fair wage right from the start.”
True to maintaining that balance, Ingram assures student workers that grades come first. And
a focal point of work-based learning is soft skills. “Many kids don’t know how to talk to a
supervisor or understand the importance of not taking too long for a break,” Ingram says. “We
take them under our wing … it’s as if every student has 25 aunts and uncles watching over
them here all the time.”
Ingram adds that the benefits work both ways: The experiences teach front-level employees
how to train and mentor young adults, making a stronger team and boosting morale – at a
4. time when it is most welcome: USPET is rebuilding after a major downsizing last year.
Challenges and Opportunities
“With 289 students, we are at maximum capacity,” says Lawrence Harris, CEO of Athens
Community Career Academy, adding that there is so much demand they could probably
double capacity if there was more room. “Here in Athens, where 36 percent of the population
is below the poverty line, it has been a great savings for families.”
The savings come in several forms. Each student receives a laptop computer, and the school
system pays for transportation between students’ home high schools and the academy. And
students who receive college credit through dual enrollment may be able to enter college as
sophomores. Athens Career Academy offers eight career-focused programs, including criminal
justice, interior design, early childhood education and mechatronics.
Henry County’s Academy for Advanced Studies is also stretching at the seams. After opening
its doors in a space shared with Henry County High School, it expanded into a 58,000-square-
foot state-of-the-art facility and is now at maximum capacity.
To handle the growing enrollment, Henry County High School students will soon move into a
new McDonough High School building, while Henry County High School will become the new
academy home.
Besides facilities, the academies’ ongoing challenge is to stay relevant, prepare students to
meet evolving workforce needs and keep pace with technology. This means curricula must
remain fluid.
“We are seeing a workforce shortage in everything from teachers to welders and construction
specialists,” Gambill of Georgia ACTE says. “The consensus from employers is we won’t have a
sufficient workforce to pull from when the current workforce starts retiring.
“At Atlanta Gas Light, the average age of employees is 48. Only 12 percent of their entire
workforce has a post-secondary college degree; the rest of their employees have skills but no
degree,” he adds. “We are seeing an ebb and flow of the current workforce as it slowly ages
out, and we need new talent. And at Georgia Power, some of their linemen earn $70,000 to
$80,000 a year, but they have an aging population and they are concerned about it.”
Graduates of the academies’ increasingly popular energy pathway will be prepared to fill some
of these positions. A new diesel technician pathway that is being developed by the Academy
for Advanced Studies in cooperation with construction equipment dealer Yancey Broth- ers
will help prepare graduates to fill the growing demand for technicians to work on heavy
equipment. Plans are underway in some academies to offer phlebotomy students hands-on
clinical prac- tice in drawing blood in cooperation with area hospitals so that they will be
eligible to become fully certified phlebotomists.
“Every student in the state of Georgia ought to have access to a career academy education,”
Arant says.
That may soon be a reality. Cagle has expressed a strong desire to make an academy education
accessible to all Georgia high school students.
“I’m committed to providing every student with access to a college and career academy by
2020, and we’re well on our way with 37 currently operating across the state,” Cagle says.
“Looking ahead, there are 10 communities in the planning and designing phases now with
many more to come.”
“Since 2007, we have made great strides in creating a more dynamic workforce for our 21st
century economy,” Arant says. “However, there are still gaps that exist, and our network of
college and career academies are perfectly designed to fulfill that workforce need.”
5. This article appears in the December 2016 issue of Georgia Trend
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