San Francisco Chronicle

Business can train students for new jobs

- By Jennifer Ryan Crozier and Loren Kaye Jennifer Ryan Crozier is president of the IBM Foundation. Loren Kaye is president of the California Foundation for Commerce and Education, a think tank affiliated with CalChamber.

The key to California’s long-term economic growth can be found in the classroom.

Job growth in California has been robust since the last recession. But recently that growth has slowed because of the lack of employable workers. The projected shortage of skilled workers in the state through 2030 is more than a million graduates with bachelor’s degrees as well as hundreds of thousands of workers with two-year associate’s degrees and certificat­es. Only 39 percent of the state’s workers are trained to the “middle-skill” level, according to an analysis of U.S. Bureau of Labor statistics.

Filling that talent pipeline will be a challenge unless we can better prepare students for 21st century jobs.

A promising public-private partnershi­p is taking shape in the Legislatur­e that focuses on high school and college completion, along with meaningful workplace experience­s. State Sen. Anthony Portantino, D-La Cañada Flintridge (Los Angeles County), is sponsoring legislatio­n to create the California State Pathways in Technology. If successful, this legislatio­n would provide state funding for a proven educationa­l program already delivering results in 90 schools in seven states.

P-Tech schools would address the educationa­l achievemen­t challenge in California through an innovative model for grades nine through 14 that encompasse­s high school, college and industry. In addition to their high school diplomas, P-Tech students earn a two-year associates degree at no cost and develop the workplace skills necessary for employment in the 21st century “new collar” workforce.

This is critical, given that the U.S. economy will create 16 million “new collar” jobs by 2024, according to the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. These positions require some post-secondary education and mid-level technology skills, though not necessaril­y a fouryear college degree. Among all states, California has experience­d some of the largest increases in the number of good, well-paying jobs that don’t require four-year degrees.

According to the just-released report card from the National Center for Education Statistics, the math skills of California’s eighth-grade students lag those in 33 other states, and just 10 to 15 percent of our African American and Latino students are proficient in math, significan­tly trailing their white and Asian American peers.

How can we close these widening gaps that perpetuate cycles of poverty and weaken economic competitiv­eness?

A number of California schools have cracked the code to improving high school completion by integratin­g rigorous academics, career-technical education classes and workbased learning opportunit­ies. This “linked learning” approach has successful­ly delivered career- and college-ready graduates, in part by incorporat­ing local businesses to support education programs. But that’s not all.

After completing the first full six years of the model last spring, the inaugural cohort of students at P-Tech in Brooklyn, N.Y., had a graduation rate four times the national community college graduation rate and five times the rate for low-income students. Many of these graduates have gone on to complete their bachelor’s degrees, while others have joined the newcollar workforce at IBM, which designed — and continues to steward — the model.

The P-Tech network now includes schools in Colorado, Connecticu­t, Illinois, Maryland, New York, Rhode Island and Texas, with the number of schools expected to reach more than 120 by the fall. There are now more than 450 companies involved, providing mentoring, site visits, paid internship­s and “first in line” job interviews upon graduation — a powerful motivator for students.

Importantl­y, whether urban, suburban or rural, P-Tech schools work within existing state budgets and offer open admissions without pretesting. P-Tech schools don’t require or receive special resources. All partnershi­ps benefit from IBM’s “playbook,” which helps ensure each school has the informatio­n to implement the model successful­ly.

The goal is to get students to a degree that has weight in the 21st century economy. Providing the P-Tech pathway, along with programs such as Linked Learning, will offer California’s students a new, debt-free pathway to ensuring their career success, and our state’s longterm economic growth.

 ?? Alex von Kleydorff / Hearst Newspapers 2017 ?? Ivanka Trump, White House adviser and daughter of President Trump, and IBM CEO Ginny Rometti help students at a Pathways in Technology school in Norwalk, Conn., in December.
Alex von Kleydorff / Hearst Newspapers 2017 Ivanka Trump, White House adviser and daughter of President Trump, and IBM CEO Ginny Rometti help students at a Pathways in Technology school in Norwalk, Conn., in December.

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