My mind is still racing with thoughts from our discussion last night, so I wanted to create a couple of new posts to help us sort our thoughts. This first one is the “Future Graduate” so we can start discussing that and finding articles and links to share, and the second post is going to be “How do we get there?”
(Actually—a warning—I spent 45 minutes typing my post and when I went to publish it,edublogs had lost it. (then when I went back later, it reappeared! So a word to the wise, if you think it’s going to take you a while, work in Word and post it later!)
One thread we talked a lot about last night was the future graduate from the college perspective. Hearing Dr. Chang’s perspective really drives home the value of the vertical teaming aspect that we were talking about—and I think if we have both the college perspective and bring in the perspective from the elementary school level in our own district that would really give us a lot of insights.
We talked a lot about the future science/math/computer science trends, which were fascinating. I was surprised to hear that the projections are that U.S. colleges will turn out only ¼ of the graduates needed in computer science by the year 2014. We also talked a lot about other math/science graduation trends.
Having more idea of future trends really would inform our discussion better, so I thought I would start out by listing a few links to some “trend” statistics.
The Occupational Outlook handbook has many helpful links, but for a quick glance, here is their projection of the fastest growing occupations from 2004-2014.
http://www.bls.gov/emp/mlrtab2.pdf
(and if you really want to peruse more of their projections, here is a link to more.http://www.bls.gov/emp/home.htm#outlook
America’s Career InfoNet is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor. This link allows you to manipulate occupational data for Texas. It shows the growth rate in actual jobs, and then in percentage growth–very interesting trends there in health sciences and computer sciences, for example.
http://www.acinet.org/acinet/state1.asp?next=state1&id=11&nodeid=12&soccode=&stfips=48&x=47&y=13
The Texas Workforce Commission allows you to manipulate projections of data for different regions of Texas. So if you pick Central Texas in the category “Industry Projections,” it creates a chart showing the growth rates of particular fields.
I was really astonished to see that the field with the highest growth rate in central Texas was Education, actually, which topped out at 54% projected growth rate. The second fastest growing field in central Texas is Health and Social Sciences, according to this projection.
Here is the link so we can explore these charts:
http://www.tracer2.com/?PAGEID=67&SUBID=114
Anyway, that is some information to start us off…