By Amaani Lyle
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, July 31, 2014 – Creating better education
standards is key to preparing military children for college and future careers,
the U.S. government’s top education official and the National Guard Bureau’s
chief said yesterday.
“We want to empower young people to choose what they want to
do, what they love and what they’re best at,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan
told the Military Child Education Coalition National Training Seminar.
As such, Duncan said the DOE has also fortified its
partnerships with community colleges, where he said real training leads to real
jobs in surrounding communities.
“Community colleges that are getting this right are becoming
economic engines … green energy jobs, [information technology], healthcare,
advanced manufacturing,” he said. “It’s amazing what they’re doing when you
continue to build their capacities.”
Duncan predicted many future jobs will be science,
technology, engineering and mathematics-based, so considering how to maintain
the interest of young people in these areas will be critical.
“The more we can build [peer] programs, replicate them and
empower young people who are living with this every day and understand the
challenges way better than you or I do [the better] … I think we can’t do
enough of that,” Duncan said.
Duncan said states have raised college academic standards, a
trend he called a “monumental shift in the right direction.”
“Standards are just what you need to know; how you teach
those standards [is] the curriculum and … we’re asking more critical thinking
skills.”
To help meet the demand of connecting qualified military
children to higher-paying, hard-to-fill jobs, Grass of the National Guard
Bureau told the seminar that the new GI Bill allows service members to pass the
benefits to their child, who may not otherwise have the opportunity to attend
school.
“The Guard can create an opportunity for those families …
through different youth programs we have today,” Grass said.
But he acknowledged that as the operations tempo changes in
coming years with many active-duty service members returning from deployments
or retiring, children once ensconced in military communities may find
themselves in school systems that aren’t necessarily aware of their
backgrounds.
“They won’t have the connection that the Guard and Reserve
has -- that family support and programs.”
As budget constraints persist, the Guard and Reserve will
need to capitalize on community-based non-profit organizations that specialize
in supporting military families, Grass said.
The nation owes a tremendous debt of gratitude to military
families who face many unique challenges, Education Secretary Duncan said.
“Our goal is simple: to have young people graduate from high
school truly college and career ready as they take that next step on their
education journey,” he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment