蜜桃影视

Explore

Analysis: Are Los Angeles High School Students Ready for Tomorrow鈥檚 Job Market?

Getty Images

Southern California鈥檚  market is hot right now. But unless something changes, many Los Angeles-area high school students won鈥檛 be ready for it when they graduate 鈥 especially if they 诲辞苍鈥檛&苍产蝉辫;go on to earn a bachelor鈥檚 degree 鈥 which many of them won鈥檛.

For as long as anyone can remember, American high schools have mostly failed to provide their students with genuinely marketable skills. But it doesn鈥檛 have to be that way. And in recent years, a growing number of 鈥渃areer and technical education鈥 (CTE) programs have sought to bridge the gap between what students learn and what local labor markets demand.

In a , we took a closer look at that gap by examining the relationship between the kinds of CTE courses high school students take and the kinds of jobs that will likely be available to them 鈥 national and locally 鈥 when they finish their education.

Nationally, we found that approximately half of the jobs that currently exist are in four big fields: Business Management & Administration (18 percent), Hospitality & Tourism (13 percent), Marketing (12 percent), and Manufacturing (9 percent). Yet only one of these fields 鈥 Business Management & Administration 鈥 sees significant course-taking in high school. Worse, most students appear to be dabbling鈥攖aking electives across various fields instead of 鈥渃oncentrating鈥 by taking three or more courses in the same field, which prior research suggests improves their odds of success in college and the workplace.

The picture looks somewhat different when we examine Los Angeles specifically. For example, compared to their peers in the rest of the U.S., kids in Los Angeles take about 50 percent more courses in 鈥淎rts, Audio-Visual Technology and Communications鈥 鈥 no huge surprise, given the number of aspiring screenwriters and music executives in the area 鈥 but comparatively fewer courses in Information Technology and Business Management & Administration.

Yet, in other ways, the local picture is not so different from the national picture. For example, of the four big fields that support over half of Los Angeles-area jobs 鈥 Marketing; Manufacturing; Hospitality & Tourism; and Business Management & Administration 鈥 only one (Business Management and Administration) sees significant CTE course-taking at the high school level. And none has a local concentration rate that exceeds 1 percent.

In fact, L.A. students are unlikely to concentrate in any of the sixteen fields we analyzed. And when they do concentrate, it鈥檚 often in fields that don鈥檛 support that many jobs. For example, the STEM and Arts, A/V Technology & Communications fields account for nearly half of local CTE concentrations, but just 4.4 percent of local employment.

In our view, these results highlight the enormous potential for greater alignment between what L.A. kids take in high school and what the local employers will be looking for when they graduate. Simply put, despite the current enthusiasm for career-oriented education, very few young Angelinos are actually experiencing it in any meaningful way. So it鈥檚 critical that the local business and education communities join hands to point more students in fruitful directions.

In a recent , Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti argued that the city鈥檚 biggest challenge is addressing 鈥渁 huge shortage of skilled labor.鈥

He鈥檚 right, of course. Today鈥檚 boom won鈥檛 last forever. And regardless of who makes varsity, or gets asked to prom, or is voted 鈥渕ost likely to succeed,鈥 tomorrow will be here before L.A. students know it.

Cameron Sublett (Pepperdine University) and David Griffith (Thomas B. Fordham Institute) are co-authors of a , 鈥How Aligned is Career and Technical Education to Local Labor Markets?鈥

Did you use this article in your work?

We鈥檇 love to hear how 蜜桃影视鈥檚 reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers.

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view 蜜桃影视's republishing terms.





On 蜜桃影视 Today