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Career and Technical Education

Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs, formerly known as vocational education, educate students about and through careers. Academics are studied within real, career-oriented contexts. CTE programs enhance college opportunities while providing students with marketable skills.

Career and technical education is about helping students fulfill their working potential. Students receive a high school education that provides them with the following:

  • Academic subject matter taught with relevance to the real world, called contextual learning.
  • Employability skills - job related skills to workplace ethics
  • Education pathways that help students explore interests and careers while progressing through school

Students make connections between what they are learning and how that knowledge is used outside of a school environment. According to contextual learning theory, learning occurs only when students process new information or knowledge in such a way that makes sense to them in their own frames of reference. Contextual learning encourages educators to choose and/or design learning environments that incorporate as many different forms of experience as possible. In such environments, students discover meaningful relationships between abstract ideas and practical applications in the context of the real world.



Top News

The Qwest Foundation has awarded Saint Paul Public Schools with a $3,500 grant to provide materials for the First Robotics teams at Arlington and Johnson High Schools. The First Robotics teams also received funding from 3M and the district's Carl Perkins federal grant..
> more info 

 Metro Career
Pathways Conference
will be held on November 19, 2008 at the University of Minnesota Continuing Education Center.
> 2007 Conference Info
> Northeast Metro 916

Saint Paul High School
Automotive Center Video