Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pandemic tests tech schools

Online classes can’t very easily replicate hands-on training

- ASTRID GALVAN AND REBECCA SANTANA

PHOENIX — For students at technical and trade colleges, the coronaviru­s is disrupting their education in a very different way than that of more traditiona­l college students. Specialize­d skills, known as career and technical education, require hands-on learning.

About 8.4 million students are seeking postsecond­ary certificat­es and associate degrees in career and technical education fields, according to the Associatio­n for Career and Technical Education.

Many are black or Hispanic and come from low-income households, according to the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce analysis. For many, technical careers are a path out of poverty.

Roughly 30 million American jobs that pay a median income of $55,000 require less education than a bachelor’s degree, the ACTE reports.

Across the country, teachers and students in technical training classes have had to adapt to class closures rapidly and creatively.

Butler Tech, which teaches Ohio high school and post-secondary students subjects ranging from police academy to welding, has started slowly reopening campus after being closed for several weeks.

When the pandemic first hit, it had to transition to online learning quickly. Jon Graft, the school’s superinten­dent and CEO, said Butler has learned some valuable lessons about having to teach in a completely different way.

“There will be a new normal for us because of the lessons we’ve learned being forced upon being online and virtual learning,” Graft said.

In Linda Romano’s New York high school nursing aide class, students at home used frying pans to learn how to use a bedpan on a patient. Romano used a doll she found in her daughter’s old bedroom to demonstrat­e how to perform a bed bath.

“I think they’re getting a better education because they’re really, really thinking about this skill and the aspects that go along with it,” Romano said.

As part of his agricultur­e courses at a high school near Columbus, Mo., Scott Stone leads a greenhouse class each year where students grow and tend plants on site. Stone, a teacher for 23 years, had never taught online when students were sent home in March.

Because the students can’t access the greenhouse, they are taking care of plants at home. Stone talks with them about their weekly developmen­t, asking them to describe what the plants smell and feel like.

“It’s like being a first-year teacher all over again,” Stone said.

The stakes are higher for postsecond­ary students like Tara Ferguson, who is studying to become a phlebotomi­st at Atlanta Technical College. Ferguson was heading into a hands-on area of instructio­n when schools began to close and shift to online learning.

But, as anyone who has had blood drawn would likely agree, the intricacie­s of feeling for a vein and poking it with a needle “just can’t be done online,” Ferguson said.

For Ferguson, a pharmacy technician and single mom of a 13-year-old daughter, becoming a phlebotomi­st would be a bump in pay and more stability.

She was supposed to start the clinical side of her education, when students train at a local medical facility to draw blood from various types of patients, on May 18.

But as the date approached and uncertain whether the class would go forward, she decided to drop it. So instead of completing her studies in August, getting her certificat­ion and going into the workforce, she hopes she can finish by early next year.

“This will put it way back. I don’t even know how long,” she said. “When do I get to move on to that next step?”

 ?? (AP/Tony Dejak) ?? From her home, Christa Schall participat­es in an online course for the cosmetolog­y school, Casal Aveda Institute, in Austintown, Ohio, earlier this month.
(AP/Tony Dejak) From her home, Christa Schall participat­es in an online course for the cosmetolog­y school, Casal Aveda Institute, in Austintown, Ohio, earlier this month.

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