The Boston Globe

Admissions lotteries would harm vocational-technical schools

- By Charles Chieppo and Jamie Gass Charles Chieppo is a senior fellow and Jamie Gass is director of school reform at Pioneer Institute, a Boston-based public policy think tank.

The vocational-technical high schools in Massachuse­tts are a national model, but failure to understand the elements of that success threatens to derail it. The decision by the framers of the Commonweal­th’s 1993 Education Reform Act to subject those enrolled in voc-tech schools to the same standards and accountabi­lity measures as other public school students transforme­d those schools. Once academic underachie­vers, the voc-techs’ MCAS performanc­e now puts them on par with comprehens­ive high schools, according to a 2022 book by Pioneer Institute, and at least 6,000 students are on waitlists. Vocational­technical graduates are better prepared to enter the workforce than traditiona­l high school graduates, thanks to programs that include skills like workplace readiness, teamwork and problem solving. Two-thirds go on to continue their vocational training or pursue further education.

Yet some policy makers would compromise the very characteri­stics that are responsibl­e for the success of these schools by mandating that admission to the schools be by lottery. This would diminish quality and harm students of all background­s.

Vocational-technical high schools already reflect the Commonweal­th’s demographi­c profile. The schools educate a higher percentage of low-income students than comprehens­ive high schools. While 19 percent of public high school students in Massachuse­tts have special needs, the number is 23 percent at voc-techs — and the graduation rate among those students is 14 points higher than at traditiona­l high schools. Finally, the dropout rate at vocational-technical schools is just a third of that in comprehens­ive high schools.

At the heart of this success is work done to ensure that the students who attend are a match for the schools’ mission. Unlike most public schools, for example, voc-tech schools offer a specialize­d curriculum that is very different than that at traditiona­l high schools. It includes alternatin­g weekly between academic and vocational education. Students are trained to operate sophistica­ted and potentiall­y dangerous equipment, which is why the schools take behavioral and attendance data into account in the admissions process.

As David Ferreira, past president of the Massachuse­tts Associatio­n of Vocational Administra­tors, said, if “you’ve got 15 kids with welding torches and somebody starts horsing around, you’ve got major issues.”

Safety is only one reason why it’s so important to ensure a good match between student and school. Because of the facilities and equipment required, per-student costs at vocational-technical schools are $5,000 more than at traditiona­l high schools.

At their core, vocational-technical high schools combine operationa­l autonomy — each regional voc-tech is its own school district — with close relationsh­ips to local employers. Business advisory councils ensure that school offerings are aligned with the skills needed in the local economy. The businesses also provide state-of-the-art equipment and co-op programs for juniors and seniors, and hire many voc-tech graduates. It’s an educationa­l ecosystem that relies on the match between student and school.

The ideas driving the current debate around vocational-technical school admissions aren’t new to Massachuse­tts. Over the last 15 years, the Commonweal­th has degraded educationa­l standards and eliminated the Office of Educationa­l Quality and Accountabi­lity, an independen­t state agency that conducted comprehens­ive school district reviews. In the span of nearly a decade before the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020, state scores on national tests fell by more than all but 17 other states in math and all but 14 in reading — and race- and incomebase­d performanc­e gaps widened further.

Rather than changes to the admissions process that would strike at the heart of a true educationa­l success story, Massachuse­tts would be better served by ensuring that vocational-technical administra­tors have the chance to inform area eighth-graders about the opportunit­ies their high schools offer. Currently, that is too often not allowed.

Expanding the number of seats available in vocational-technical high schools is a good investment for Massachuse­tts. But it’s critical they are expanded in a way that promotes equity without endangerin­g the academic and occupation­al excellence that continues to drive burgeoning demand for these schools.

Massachuse­tts would be better served by ensuring that vocational-technical administra­tors have the chance to inform area eighth-graders about the opportunit­ies their high schools offer.

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