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Alabama College and Career Ready Standards

What are the Alabama College and Career Ready Standards?

The Alabama College and Career Ready Standards are a state-led effort to establish a single set of clear educational standards for English-language arts and mathematics. They were designed by a diverse group of Alabama teachers, experts, parents, and school administrators. They are designed to ensure that students graduating from Alabama high schools are prepared to go to college or enter the workforce. The ACCR standards are comparable to other state standards as well as international standards to guarantee Alabama students are competitive in the emerging global marketplace.

Why are the Alabama College and Career Ready Standards important?

The Alabama State Board of Education wants to make sure that Alabama students are given the tools they need to succeed. High standards that are consistent across states provide teachers, parents, and students with a set of clear expectations so that everyone can work toward together. This will ensure that all of our students are well prepared with the skills and knowledge necessary to compete with not only their peers here in Alabama, but also with students in other states and around the world, maintaining America’s competitive edge. The ACCR standards are a common sense first step toward ensuring our children are getting the best possible education no matter where they live.

6 Ways to be ACCR

  • A benchmark score on any section of the ACT

  • A qualifying score on an AP or IB Exam

  • Approved college or postsecondary credit while in high school

  • A benchmark level on the ACT WorkKeys

  • An approved industry credential

  • Documented acceptance for enlistment into the military

14 Career Skills Needed-- Trends to Consider

The mission of education, as we all know, is to help prepare students for the future. An important element of that preparation involves the development of career skills. Preparing today's students for tomorrow's careers is not an easy task, however. As society's needs and desires change, so too do the nature and number of potential occupations.

Those 14 skill areas and related skill-building exercises are the following:

Business-Management Skills: Students should understand how companies operate, how company products and/or services reflect market needs, and how companies meet market needs to make a profit.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Conduct a survey to determine the needs and desires of students in your class. Identify those needs and desires that students believe are not being met adequately by existing companies. Arrange students into small groups, and ask each group to develop a business plan for a fictional company that would satisfy one of those unmet needs. Compare plans and discuss which company probably would be the most successful.

  • Communication Skills: Students should be able to communicate ideas and thoughts through writing and speaking.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Display a picture of an urban city scene. Ask each student to write a description of what he or she sees in the picture. Have students share their descriptions with their classmates and then discuss the differences in student perceptions. Brainstorm with students the words they could use to describe the picture (a) most quickly and easily and (b) most thoroughly and richly.

  • Computer-Use Skills: Students should understand the importance of computers and computer software in most jobs.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Arrange for students to visit a local business (preferably a large company). Have students talk to company employees about how they use computers in their jobs and which software programs they use. Ask students to share their findings with their classmates. Create a master list of all the ways in which employees use computers at the company visited.

  • Computer-Programming Skills: Students should understand how computers complete a task or set of tasks.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Choose an activity that students are familiar with (such as playing a video in a VCR, for example). Ask students to analyze the steps (tasks) involved in completing the activity and to organize those steps into a flow chart. Explain that the flow chart demonstrates how tasks can be organized into a continuum of individual steps -- the underlying structure of all software programs.

  • Cultural History and Geography Skills: Students should be able to locate various countries on a map and understand how the customs and beliefs of people in those countries are similar to and different from their own.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Arrange students into small groups, and assign each group a different country. Ask students in each group to use print and online resources to research family life in their assigned country and to create a drawing or collage showing a living room or family room in a typical home in that country. Display the drawings on a classroom bulletin board, and discuss with students the similarities and differences of those rooms and compare them to a typical living room or family room in the United States. Encourage students to investigate further how geography, religion, climate, and so on, influence the contents of living rooms in other countries.

  • Foreign-Language Skills: Students should be able to speak a language other than English.

  • Skill-Building Exercise:Ask each student to make a list of five to ten phrases he or she commonly uses when talking with friends. Have students use print and online resources to learn how those phrases are written and spoken in several different languages. Create a classroom "English to ..." translator of modern colloquial expressions.

  • Graphic-Design Skills: Students should be able to convey thoughts and feelings using a variety of forms.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Arrange students into groups, and ask each group to identify a local or national current events story. Have each group use original drawings, as well as pictures cut from magazines and newspapers, to create a wall poster that conveys the message of the story without words.

  • Human-Relationship Skills: Students should be able to accept differing opinions and behaviors and get along with others in order to create positive relationships and a harmonious environment.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Invite students to imagine the following situation: Bob hired Andrew to paint his house. Andrew completed the job and asked Bob for payment. Bob was dissatisfied with Andrew's work and refused to pay. Ask students how they would settle the dispute in a way that would satisfy both parties. Ask students what Bob and/or Andrew could have done to avoid the problem.

  • Information-Management Skills: Students should be able to locate, collect, organize, store, and retrieve data and information.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Brainstorm with students procedures someone might use to collect, organize, store, and retrieve data about the types of cars parked in a shopping center in your city or town. Have students work in small groups to plan how to put some of the most popular procedures to work. Discuss which procedures worked best and why.

  • Money-Management Skills: Students should be able to manage financial resources and maintain a positive balance between expenses and income.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Arrange students into groups of five, and tell students that each group represents a family consisting of a father, a mother, and three children. Provide each "family" with $3,800 in play money, and tell family members that the money is for their expenses for the next month. Ask members of each group to estimate how much money they might spend on a variety of expenses, including food, clothing, housing, entertainment, and so on. When the lists are complete, have students share them with their real families, and ask those family members to help them determine how much those items actually cost in your area. Encourage students to compare the actual costs with their estimated costs.

  • Problem-Solving Skills: Students should be able to solve problems.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Invite students to survey friends, relatives, and acquaintances to identify common problems people experience in everyday life. Then ask students to work in teams to brainstorm solutions to some of the most common problems. Encourage students to write up their solutions and present them to the original survey participants to get feedback on whether the proposed solutions would work.

  • Science and Math Skills: Students should have a fundamental understanding of the natural world.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Arrange students into small groups, and ask each group to mark off with string a 3-inch by 3-inch square somewhere on the school grounds. Have students in each group examine their marked area with a magnifying glass and prepare a list of all items found within the square, such as insects, soil, rocks, plants, and animals. Then ask students to calculate the total area examined by all students and to estimate the total number of items found.

  • Teaching-Training Skills: Students should understand how to teach facts and concepts to others.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Teach half the students in the class how to do a new craft project. Teach the rest of the students how to do a different craft project. When the projects are done, ask each student to list the steps he or she followed to complete the project. Then have each student use his or her list to teach the project to a student who learned the opposite project.

  • Vocational-Technical Skills: Students should be able to use a variety of tools, machines, natural resources and equipment to build, install, set up, operate, and repair mechanical and electronic devices and to create products made from various materials.

  • Skill-Building Exercise: Ask students to draw a schematic of their home's electrical wiring system and bring the plans to class. Then provide students with cardboard and have each student build a scale model of his or her home, outlining the electrical system with string. (The string should be glued to the proper walls and outlets).

Simple skill-building exercises such as these will help your students become more aware of the types of jobs most likely to be available in the future, prepare them for the tasks those jobs will demand, and provide them with a foundation in the skills those jobs will require.


*Source - www.educationworld.com