[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 50 (Wednesday, March 22, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H2293]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IMPORTANCE OF CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, recently, the House
Education and the Workforce Subcommittee on Early Childhood,
Elementary, and Secondary Education hosted a hearing to discuss the
state of career and technical education in America, as well as changes
that can be made to strengthen CTE and better prepare students of all
ages for the workforce.
One of the biggest challenges facing career and technical education
is the stigma associated with it. Through the years, we have seen
wrongheaded claims that students involved in the trades lacked
ambition. Those misplaced assumptions are slowly subsiding, but not
soon enough.
CTE has established itself as a path that many high-achieving
students choose in pursuit of industry certification and hands-on
skills that they can use right out of high school, in training
programs, or in college.
At this hearing, we heard from many knowledgeable witnesses,
including Mike Rowe, the television host of the television show ``Dirty
Jobs.'' Mike shared his experience as a young student who didn't know
what career path he wanted to follow. So, he looked no further than his
local community college.
His eyes were open to hundreds of courses that he could afford to
study. And Mike said: ``That experience opened doors I didn't even know
existed. But that same experience is precisely what thousands of kids
are discouraged from pursuing every year.''
Mr. Speaker, the reality is, a huge gap exists in communities
nationwide. There are jobs out there, good family-sustaining jobs, but
the unemployed or underemployed are either ill-prepared or lack the
appropriate training to fill these vacancies. The answer to this
problem starts with career and technical education.
That is why last Congress I introduced Strengthening Career and
Technical Education for the 21st Century Act. This bill, which passed
the House in the fall by a vote of 405-5, aimed to close the skills gap
by modernizing the Federal investment in career and technical education
programs and connecting educators with industry stakeholders--the job
creators.
I look forward to reintroducing similar legislation with my Career
and Technical Education Caucus co-chair, Congressman Jim Langevin from
Rhode Island, later this month.
During the hearing, Mike Rowe described naysayers as viewing a job in
the trades as a ``vocational consolation prize.'' Well, Mr. Speaker,
nothing could be further from the truth. We must change this stigma,
this bias, and help encourage American students to study a career that
they are interested in and that they are passionate about. The list is
endless with career and technical education, and the jobs are out
there.
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