Education Minister Visits Olds & Emphasizes the Importance of Career Based Learning
The Honourable Demetrios Nicolaides, Minister of Education in Alberta, speaks at an event highlighting the Central Alberta Collegiate Institute (CACI) program.
The partners of the Central Alberta Collegiate Institute (CACI) program were pleased to showcase career pathways learning underway in Central Alberta, at an event at Olds College of Agriculture and Technology held on June 20. They were also pleased to host Alberta Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides, who spoke about the importance of helping students have career based learning opportunities that lead directly into their career training.
Nicolaides spoke about initiatives underway at the provincial level, referencing the Career Education Task Force established a few years ago, and a dual credit review group that will meet over the summer. He said the group will review dual credit programming and its components to gain a “better understanding of how to eliminate barriers, improve transferability, and explore the role that collegiate schools play in improving course offerings.”
The gathering welcomed dozens of senior leaders from CACI partner organizations, as well as elected board members, staff members, representatives from Advanced Education and Alberta Education, and other K-12 school authorities and post-secondaries involved in career pathway programming for youth. Participants heard about the development of CACI and career learning opportunities, and then from a panel of five students who have experienced career learning. Participants also toured facilities on the Olds College campus, observing students in trades programming: welding, veterinary technician and heavy equipment mechanics.
In her presentation, Taylor talked about the impact of early exposure to career learning.
Dual credit is one type of career learning opportunity available to students, and is a critically important piece of career learning. Some statistics shared at the event about dual credit learning:
- Several Alberta school divisions examined their data and found that with students who participated in dual credit learning, 98% graduated from high school (compared to an 83 - 87% overall completion rate provincially)
- Transitions to post secondary are higher for students who participate in dual credit as
well. Students who enrolled in dual credit courses during high school saw a:- 8% transition rate to post secondary diploma programs (compared to 4% of students not in dual credit)
- 20% transition rate to certificate learning in post secondary (compared to 2% of students not in dual credit)
- 28% transition rate to post-secondary degree programs (compared to 16% not in dual credit)
- 71% transition rate to post-secondary trades programming (compared to 6% not in dual credit)
CACI partners include: Red Deer Public Schools, Red Deer Catholic Regional School Division, Wolf Creek Public Schools, Chinook’s Edge School Division, Red Deer Polytechnic, Olds College of Agriculture and Technology, and CAREERS. CACI was approved for provincial funding in the spring of 2023.