Vocational Education: How Will They Make a Living?
The saddest fact about U.S. education is that it repels those most in need of it. Last month President Kennedy launched a drive to urge the million youngsters who dropped out of school over the past twelve months to go back in September. School officials, teachers and guidance counselors are cooperating in the campaign. But it will be doing well if it persuades even 1% of that million to return to classrooms. And by September 1964, another million will have dropped out.
The dropouts have a bleak employment future ahead of them. Over the past ten years, with overall employment steadily expanding, jobs for those without high school education have declined by 25%. Of the nation's 4,322,000 unemployed, about two-thirds are people who failed to complete high school. Many of them lack even the meager education required to pass qualifying tests for Government retraining programs. Among teen-agers out of school, the unemployment rate is 16.2%.
An Unknown Segment. Yet many jobs requiring skills go unfilled. In New York City, municipal hospitals need 60% more registered nurses. In Philadelphia, 15,000 skilled jobs have no takers. The U.S. needs, among other occupations, more auto mechanics, carpenters, computer tenders, and machinists. Experts foresee by 1970 a need for 200,000 additional technicians a year.
The combination of people without jobs and jobs without people to fill them has stirred new interest in the segment of U.S. public education that educated Americans know least aboutvocational education. Vo-ed, as teachers call it, is dismally inadequate to meet the demands upon it. Most U.S. vocational high schools offer the youngsters so very little that on the average two-thirds of their students drop out before graduation, as against one-third in academic high schools.
City school officials tend to use vo-ed schools as dumping grounds for the dull and the delinquent. The teachers, equipment and training methods are often so far behind the times that, in effect, the schools teach students to be unemployable. Last year a report by the Taconic Foundation concluded that the usefulness of New York City's vocational schools is "extremely questionable." Frank Cassell, personnel director of Inland Steel Co., says that "vocational education in Illinois bears about the same relationship to the real needs of industry as the shovel and the pickax do to the equipment demands of road building."
A Lunatic Pattern. The shortcomings are partly rooted in vo-ed's history. Under laws going back to 1917, almost half of the total federal outlays for vocational education are channeled into agriculture and home economics. Since state and local officials conform to the rules so as to get as much federal money as possible, the result is a lunatic pattern. Last year 26% of all vo-ed funds went into agricultural training, although fulltime farm workers comprise only 6% of the nation's labor force.
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