LOWER LAKE, Calif. – The Konocti Unified School District is among the first recipients of a new state grant that seeks to link education and careers, with the district planning to use the funds to set up the first magnet high school in Lake County.
The California Department of Education announced the Career Pathways Trust grant winners, which along with Konocti Unified include 40 consortia representing hundreds of thousands of California students.
Konocti Unified Unified Superintendent Donna Becnel said the district received a five-year $1.2 million grant to expand its health-based education.
“We are just so excited to have this opportunity, especially for our kids in the area,” Becnel said.
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson reported that state officials received 123 eligible applications containing about $709 million in requested grants, nearly triple the $250 million in available funding.
Applicants included community college districts, county offices of education, direct-funded charter schools and school districts, the state reported.
“To make good on our goal of a world-class education for every California student, they have to graduate with the skills and knowledge they need to succeed in the real world,” said Tom Torlakson. “By demonstrating the relevance of students' education, these programs not only encourage kids to stay in school, but also combine the rigorous academics and practical experience employers say they need.”
Regarding Konocti Unified's plans, Becnel said, “We are expanding our health occupations pathway and developing a health occupations magnet high school,” adding there is no such program currently in Lake County.
Becnel said the magnet high school will focus on preparing students for occupations in the health industry.
“Because we have a strong foundation in our current pathway at the high school, we’re doing an expansion,” she said. “So we've already got some of the bases covered.”
Students will take regular comprehensive classes like English and math at Lower Lake High School, then go into the magnet high school for medical-related classes in what Becnel said would be a college-style education.
She said the grant needed to be based on a need in Lake County.
“Lake County ranks very low on the health statistics, and there's a huge need not only to develop health occupations but also in developing a healthy community,” Becnel said.
The district's current pathway already has had active links with the local health care industry, including St. Helena Hospital Clear Lake and Sutter Lakeside Hospital, according to Becnel.
“Over the last couple of years our students have actually been volunteering up at Sutter Lakeside,” she said.
Becnel said the district plans to survey students in order to find out how many want to be a part of the expanded medical pathway.
In addition to working in a traditional medical field, many other occupations – sports medicine, nutrition, physical therapy – have a health care component, giving the students who go through the pathway a lot of options, Becnel said.
Ideally, Becnel said, students who complete the health education pathway would receive some kind of certification.
The district's plans include having the magnet high school program be self-sustaining after five years, Becnel said.
She said Konocti Unified will need assistance from local medical providers in the form of guest speakers, job shadowing opportunities, the ability to watch operations and learn about equipment.
Becnel said the district is preparing to start quickly with the new education pathway – this fall, in fact.
“The money is coming so they expect us to implement right away,” she said.
Part of the preparation, Becnel said, includes a planned visit to a Dozier-Libbey Medical High School, a very successful magnet high school in Antioch. The school recently was named among the best high schools in the United States by US News and World Report.
Becnel said of Konocti Unified's new program, “I think it's going to have a lot of ramifications beyond just what’s happening with our students in the school.”
Senate President pro Tempore Darrell Steinberg spearheaded the creation of the California Career Pathways Trust in 2014, establishing a one-time $250 million competitive grant program in the state's 2013-14 budget, the California Department of Education reported.
Grant recipients are tasked with creating sustained career pathways programs that connect businesses, K–12 schools and community colleges to better prepare students for the 21st century workplace.
Under Torlakson, the California Department of Education administers the program, soliciting and identifying the strongest applications based on a rigorous evaluation process carried out by the CDE and its state partners, the California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office and the California Workforce Investment Board.
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