Kinea White Epps, Staff Writer
An honors student at Athens Drive High School, Monica Matthai had her heart set on becoming an orthodontist, a safe and fitting choice for her academic talents.
That was until she made her first dress in a clothing design class under the school's career- technical education program. Matthai was hooked by the needle and thread and the thought of seeing her creations come to life on a fashion runway.
Goodbye, dental school. The 18-year-old senior recently was awarded a $48,000 scholarship to study fashion management at N.C. State University.
"I've always liked clothes, but I had never seen it more than just shopping," Matthai said. "I never thought fashion would be my career."
Matthai is the poster child CTE educators love to tout as proof of the transformation of courses that used to wear the "vocational education" label and catered to students bound for blue-collar jobs instead of college. Think metal shop, auto mechanics or carpentry.
Over the past decade or so, though, courses under the CTE umbrella have been revamped, tailored to the modern workplace that demands workers with a higher degree of technical savvy.
Such courses include bioscience, finance, television production, computer programming and, in Matthai's case, clothing design. CTE supporters argue that such courses are vital to today's economy, in which an auto mechanic needs to master computer diagnostics.
"Most people recognize that maintaining a car isn't something that can be done under a tree anymore," said state Superintendent June Atkinson. "It requires complex equipment and a very high reading level, and CTE prepares students for that kind of career path."
But CTE courses have been frequently threatened by proposed budget cuts from President Bush, including a recommendation this year to slash more than $1 billion from the programs. Federal money is used to pay for teacher salaries, professional development and equipment such as computers and sewing machines to run the programs.
North Carolina could lose more than $30 million in federal support. About $23 million goes to public schools and nearly $12 million goes to job training for community colleges, which also custom-fit their courses to the technical skills demanded by local employers.
Instead of continued federal support for CTE, Bush wants to channel the money toward boosting academic achievement under the mandates of the federal No Child Left Behind law, a favorite education initiative of the president.
In the past, Congress has rejected Bush's cuts and restored money to CTE programs -- a likely blueprint for this year's budget struggles. So far, both the House and Senate have rejected Bush's cuts to education, including money for CTE programs.
Corrine Hirsch, a press secretary in the Office of Budget and Management, which advises the president on budget matters, said the Bush administration thinks No Child Left Behind would prepare students for the workplace and improve student success in schools better than CTE courses. Putting more money into No Child "will help improve academic achievement and graduation rates for at-risk high school students, many of whom are CTE students," Hirsch said in an e-mail message.
But supporters of CTE courses disagree. They argue that money for their courses is important because they give students hands-on experiences and entice students to see the practical relevance of academic classes such as math and English.
"[These courses] oftentimes engage students and it's where the core academics come alive," said Stephen DeWitt, senior director of public policy for the Association of Career and Technical Education.
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