Chattanooga Times Free Press

Commission OKs $3M for technical education

- BY SHANNON COAN STAFF WRITER

More high school students will have the opportunit­y to receive emergency medicine or welding training through $3.15 million the Hamilton County Commission allocated to career and technical education programs Wednesday.

The funding will bolster existing technical programs that serve six high schools and create Hamilton County Schools’ first “pipeline partnershi­p.”

At Hixson High, a new partnershi­p between the school’s CHI Memorial Institute of Healthcare and Medical Careers and Hamilton County Emergency Medical Services will give students the chance to receive hands-on training and earn a job with the agency upon graduation.

Renee Parker, Hixson High’s lead health science teacher, said the partnershi­p originated from the community’s need for more emergency medical service personnel and student interest. She referenced one student who has talked about wanting to pursue emergency services since his freshman year but previously didn’t have the opportunit­y.

In the past, the futureread­y institute has tried to give students interested in emergency medicine opportunit­ies through a hospital’s emergency department, but it’s not the same kind of experience, Parker said. The new class will align more closely to those students’ career goals and provide them with direct training from EMS personnel.

“It’s really providing more opportunit­ies,” she said by phone.

The more the school and its partners can provide students real-world opportunit­ies, the more real-world certificat­ions and licensures will result that will lead to direct employment within Hamilton County, Parker said.

“We are growing our own, and we’re reaping the rewards of putting those students first and educating them and keeping them a part of our community,” she said.

Though the details are still being ironed out, Parker said the goal is to have seniors obtain an emergency medical technician­basic certificat­ion by the end of a yearlong course.

On Wednesday, the County Commission allocated $150,000 for the new program’s equipment and classroom needs. An additional $100,000 will be contribute­d to the program during the next four years through the county’s general budget, Mary Francis Hoots, the county mayor’s spokespers­on, said.

Hamilton County Mayor Weston Wamp said his office picked the investment­s with the goal of expanding high schools’ career and technical programs and better align them with Chattanoog­a State’s Tennessee College of Applied Technology to allow dual enrollment to thrive.

“It’s important that students across the county have an opportunit­y to develop a set of skills,” Wamp said by phone. “I don’t know that there’s anything more profound that we could impart on students in our community than a set of skills, whether that’s the career they end up in or not.”

Across Hamilton County, there are roughly 30 future-ready institutes, which aim to embed small learning communitie­s at the district’s traditiona­l high schools that focus on a variety of industry themes with the goal of preparing students for careers after graduation. Students can apply to attend an institute at a school they are not zoned for through the district’s school choice program.

Roughly half the funds allocated by the commission will be used to grow programs at the Harrison Bay Future Ready Center, which serves students from Central High and Ooltewah High. The $1.5 million investment will allow for four new classrooms to be created, enabling enrollment to double within the next few years. It will also be used to install an elevator to promote accessibil­ity and upgrade equipment in the advanced manufactur­ing and architectu­re and constructi­on pathways to ensure students train on the latest technologi­es.

At The Howard School, $1 million will be used for the addition of a ventilatio­n system for welding classrooms, which will expand the number of students who can participat­e in the program. The remaining $500,000 will provide industry-standard constructi­on and automotive equipment to East Ridge High.

Similar to the program at Hixson High, these investment­s were a result of student interest, Wamp said. He noted the roughly 100-student-long waitlist for Harrison Bay and an East Ridge High teacher who mentioned students’ interest in welding when Wamp visited the school.

“This is about meeting students where they’re at,” he said, “and making sure that we’re providing opportunit­ies for students of all types of gift sets and interests to be able to pursue education and even a career pathway that suits their interests.”

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