The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Past, present and future of education

- By Dr. Brett A. Cooper Daniel Boone School District

As a soon-tobe retired public school educator of what will be nearly 34 years of serving students and families in three different school districts across the southeast demography of Pennsylvan­ia, I share some past, present and anticipate­d future thoughts and opinions of our commonweal­th’s public education system.

My early career experience­s found educators advocating post-secondary options for our learners as college-bound being the only answer to a successful livelihood. If your post-secondary plan did not involve further education in the traditiona­l four-year college/university, you would be setting yourself up for failure in the workplace.

As I progressed in my public service career supporting students and families through teaching health education and physical education for nearly 15 years, I began to experience a shift in the earlier traditiona­l thought. Emphasis began to shift away from the four-year college/university-only belief for success to perhaps two years of college/university experience­s or even education through service to our country via our military as a viable option to a successful livelihood.

Approachin­g the middle part of my public school service,

I was transition­ing from the classroom to building-level administra­tive roles; another shift occurred even further to include not only four-year or two-year college/university experience­s and post-secondary education via service to our great nation via the military, but rather the inclusion of career technical education began to take hold as a viable option, too, for successful livelihood preparatio­n.

College opportunit­ies through concurrent/dual enrollment began to emerge in secondary schools, providing a jump-start to post-secondary learning for our students. This option was made available to our college-bound students as well as our career and technical education students. This was groundbrea­king in that it broke the mold of the traditiona­l education model of preparatio­n for post-secondary education to that of preparatio­n for post-secondary experience­s that promote the continuati­on of learning via a variety of learning modalities.

In reviewing the latter part of my public school service, transition­ing from a buildingle­vel administra­tor to a central office administra­tor and superinten­dent of schools, I’ve come to realize that what is most important to our students and families is identifyin­g appropriat­e post-secondary learning opportunit­ies/options for our young people that should be available in many forms.

We have students whose path to successful livelihood would take them through four-year or two-year college experience­s or a combinatio­n thereof, which may have started as early as high school sophomores.

Some would define it as learning experience­s afforded them through service in one of our military branches. Others would have it defined as the successful completion of a career technical education program, which too, may have included college coursework. As I approach my final months of public school service and look into the proverbial crystal ball that has so often eluded me throughout my career, I see an even further shift to additional post-secondary options/opportunit­ies; the aforementi­oned aside, available to students throughout their high school experience­s to include internship and apprentice­ship opportunit­ies.

Preparatio­n for postsecond­ary opportunit­ies/options should have no boundaries and be limitless for our students and families. Learning should be an ongoing, neverendin­g path that continues to offer continued growth in providing successful livelihood­s that are fluid and flexibly adjusted without roadblocks.

Today’s students and tomorrow’s learners are technicall­y swift with an expectatio­n of learning and access to instantane­ous informatio­n with the swipe of a finger. Families have an expectatio­n, postCOVID-19, of flexibilit­y in how their child accesses individual learning growth opportunit­ies. An integrated learning system that is accessible anytime and anywhere and provides such flexibilit­y will play an integral role in publicly educating our society’s most valuable assets, our children, for careers and jobs that yet exist and require outside-of-the-box thinking and preparatio­n.

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Cooper

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