NH Construction Career Day
NH Construction Career Day,
Sept. 22 & 23 Hopkinton, NH
A special day for high school students to explore the wide variety of construction and transportation careers.
Learn More
The MSI Mechanical Systems Inc. “School-to-Career” Partnership is
a multiple state-wide effort assisting local schools and communities
to develop a learning system that promotes attainment of high
academic standards, career development and workforce preparation for
every student. Many schools and school districts in Massachusetts
and New Hampshire use this resource to sustain the school-work
partnership within their schools.
School-to-Career (STC) is an initiative - a philosophy - a method of
offering relevant curriculum to students that links what they learn
in the classroom to what they will do after graduation. Children
learn better when information is made relevant. STC ensures that
relevancy is brought to light by linking their schoolwork to
workplace realities.
School-to-Career bridges the world of school to the world of work by
linking school-based activities such as classroom speakers, tutors,
mentors and professional development curricula with real world work
activities. Work reality is infused into the standard course of
study through collaboration of the business community and classroom
teachers.
MSI’s pursuit of high academic standards and vocational training has
focused attention on motivating students to excel in school and to
make wise career choices. School-to-Career directly reinforces a
school system's high academic achievement goals: more students at or
above grade level, fewer students dropping out of school, and more
students going on to postsecondary education or training.
Mission
MSI’s School-to-Career mission is to prepare every student to make
responsible, productive career choices and manage the challenges of
accelerated change in the workplace by bridging school-based and
work-based activities.
This requires a systematic, comprehensive,
community-wide effort to give young people the opportunity to:
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Prepare for
meaningful careers by pursuing a clearly identifiable,
accessible, and attractive pathway into the workplace. |
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Receive top quality,
integrated academic and career/technical instruction. |
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Gain the foundation
skills needed to pursue postsecondary education and
other lifelong learning. |
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Experience work-based
learning while in school. |
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School-to-Career Involves:
Teachers - who work to integrate relevance into the core
curriculum and maintain academic rigor throughout class work.
School System Administrators - who enable School-to-Career
activities to take place at schools throughout their districts.
Students - who participate in career fairs, job shadowing,
internships, and other school-to-career activities.
Businesspeople and Employer Representatives - who serve as a
resource for teachers and administrators to support School-to-Career
activities such as job shadowing, internships, and classroom
speakers.
Parents - who see the benefits of their children
participating in School-to-Career activities
Essential Principles of School-to-Career:
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Promote high
standards of academic learning and performance for all
young people. |
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Incorporate
industry-valued standards that help inform curricula and
lead to respected, portable credentials. |
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Provide opportunities for
contextual learning. |
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Help to create smaller,
more effective learning environments. |
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Expand opportunities for all young people
and expose them to a broad array of career opportunities. |
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Provide program continuity between High
School and postsecondary education and training. |
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Provide work-based learning that is
directly tied to classroom learning. |
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Assist employers in providing high quality
work-based learning opportunities. |
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Connect young people with supportive
adults, mentors, and other role models. |
|
Benefits to Employers
STC programs benefit employers by opening a direct communication
channel that provides the ability to affect needed change within the
curricula thus insuring the growth of a quality employee talent pool
from which to draw. In addition to assuring current and portable
credentials for the student, the employer will directly affect the
training of more highly skilled and educated entry-level employees.
This will result in lower training costs for the employer.
Benefits to Students
STC programs help students choose a career goal that leads to a good
job in our community. Students will have more opportunities to
enroll in a four-year or community college or enter the skilled
workforce directly from high school. Students earn higher starting
salaries because they are more productive.
Benefits to Teachers
STC programs help encourage students who might not otherwise be
successful in high school. Dropout rates and discipline problems
decline, math and English scores improve, and attendance increases
for participating students.
Benefits to the Community
STC programs offer a partnership between schools and the community
at large. By establishing these linkages, we provide support in
strengthening relationships between students, teachers and community
members from all walks of life.
These linkages and partnerships serve as the foundation for:
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Improving the
lives of people of all ages. |
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Strengthening
individuals, families, neighborhoods, and communities. |
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Building awareness of the
value of school-workplace partnerships to the greater
society. |
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What is this worth?
We cannot quantify the goodwill and positive working relationships
of working with our schools and community. The program improvements
and information sharing resulting from these relationships may be
priceless. We can, however, try to quantify the many hours of
volunteerism that make it all work.
When students sit in a classroom and wonder, "When am I ever going
to use this information?" the real world can seem very distant. To
receive a top-notch education, they need to see the relevancy of
rigorous academic study to their own lives.
MSI’s goal for “School-to-Career” is to bring students,
businesses, communities, schools and families together to form
partnerships. These partnerships offer many opportunities for
students, educators, business leaders and community members - from
job shadowing experiences to formal, long-term curriculum
improvements. A better-educated, more productive workforce will help
build more prosperous communities and a more enlightened culture.
In order to more effectively cultivate talent in the building
professions and trades, MSI Mechanical Systems has become the first
New Hampshire partner of the ACE Mentor Program of America, Inc. MSI
is starting an ACE chapter at Windham High School to be their first
student-mentor pilot program starting in the Fall of 2010.
ACE is an acronym for architecture, construction, and engineering.
The program's mission is to enlighten and increase the awareness of
high school students to career opportunities in architecture,
construction and engineering and related areas of the design and
construction industry through mentoring; and to provide scholarship
opportunities for students in an inclusive manner reflective of the
diverse school population. Brian Hooper and Tom Hooper of MSI will
serve at the leaders and main contacts of the ACE Mentor Program in
New Hampshire. Contact
bhooper@msimechanical.com or
thooper@msimechanical.com