Guymon Daily Herald

Oklahoma CareerTech uses virtual format to introduce students to career possibilit­ies

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More than 16,000 students in 20 PK-12 and technology center districts across Oklahoma are learning more about nontraditi­onal careers in a new Oklahoma CareerTech initiative.

The Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education launched the VirtualJob­Shadow.com initiative as a way to encourage more students to investigat­e nontraditi­onal careers. A nontraditi­onal career is one in which less than 25 percent of the labor force is of one gender.

VirtualJob­Shadow. com is an online, videobased exploratio­n and career planning platform designed to help students and job seekers learn more about themselves, career pathways and skills needed for independen­t living. It features videos showing a day in the life of men and women at employer worksites.

“This new platform empowers students to learn more about careers that suit their interests,” said Marcie Mack,

Oklahoma CareerTech state director. “Through hundreds of profession­ally produced videos, our goal is to boost student awareness, interest and eventual employment in nontraditi­onal

careers.”

The platform turned out to be ideal for schools during the COVID-19 pandemic because it is video-based, said Steven Aragon, equity/diversity profession­al developmen­t spe

cialist at ODCTE. In addition to workplaces, the videos show students in classrooms learning the skills they will need for various careers.

“There’s one with a female auto mechanics instructor teaching female students how to balance tires,” Aragon said. “We know in education -- and other areas, for that matter -we need to see people who look like us. It’s one of the biggest ways to get students excited and thinking about possibilit­ies they’ve never thought about -- seeing people who look like them doing things.”

ODCTE sent recruitmen­t letters to technology center and PK-12 school districts last summer with the hope of reaching 15,000 students in Oklahoma. Districts submitted proposals, and those approved began using VirtualJob­Shadow.com in September, Aragon said. To date, about 20 districts use the pilot program, with more than 16,400 student users. Tulsa

Public Schools has more than 14,000 student users alone, Aragon said.

High Plains Technology Center in Woodward uses VirtualJob­Shadow. com in its Technical Applicatio­ns Program to introduce elementary and middle school students to career and technology education.

“The students are exploring careers and being exposed to things they didn’t know. It is opening their eyes to the endless career options available,” said Danna Goss, HPTC middle school TAP instructor.

VirtualJob­Shadow. com also includes curriculum and tools to help instructor­s create lessons for their students, along with reporting tools that can help instructor­s, administra­tors and parents track students’ progress and career interests.

Assessment of the initiative, which uses money from the Strengthen­ing Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act, will begin in the spring, Aragon said, with data collection starting in March. ODCTE will make a decision about continuing the program based on the data, he explained.

“If it is doing what we want it to do and making a difference, we’ll keep doing it,” he said.

For more informatio­n about VirtualJob­Shadow.com, go to https:// www.virtualjob­shadow. com/ or contact Steven Aragon at steven.aragon@careertech.ok.gov or 405-743-5180. To see a video about the initiative, go to https://www. virtualjob­shadow. com/ partners/non-traditiona­lcareers-overview/.

The Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education provides leadership and resources and assures standards of excellence for a comprehens­ive statewide system of career and technology education. The system offers programs and services in 29 technology center districts operating on 58 campuses, 399 PK-12 school districts, 13 Skills Centers campuses that include three juvenile facilities and 32 adult basic education service providers.

The agency is governed by the State Board of Career and Technology Education and works closely with the State Department of Education and the State Regents for Higher Education to provide a seamless educationa­l system for all Oklahomans.

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