Connecting Content to Careers

 As educators, we can not expect our graduating students in Michigan to be guaranteed employment without the necessary knowledge and skills to meet an employer’s needs.  A solid career readiness framework should be the basis through which school districts teach academic content.  During the early grades, students should become familiar with careers through learning that connects classroom content to future work.  As students enter middle school, career exploration activities should be aligned to core academic, technical, and employability skills to help define students’ areas of interest.  As students progress into high school, their coursework should be consistent with their career interests while still meeting academic standards.  

Core content and career readiness are not mutually exclusive.  Career readiness provides the context for which the core academic content is needed.  To teach them separately robs our students of the opportunities to develop into career ready high school graduates with a clear plan in terms of both social, societal, and financial success.  

Connecting Content to Careers Strategies:

A career ready student is able to connect the relationship between academic content, employability skills, and his or her post-secondary options.  Whether it be language arts, math, science, art, or any other subject, a teacher should always build a lesson plan around the career readiness framework and facilitate opportunities for students to make connections.

The Michigan Career Development Model outlines six career zones for K-6 students to explore for career awareness opportunities and the seventeen career clusters for 7-12th grade students to research for their career exploration and preparation experiences.  Teachers are encouraged to find ways to naturally integrate these zones or clusters into their already existing curriculum.

College and community-based programs can provide students with opportunities to apply the content learned in the classroom beyond those walls.  These programs often can expose students to non-traditional career choices when they see people like themselves participating in these related careers.  Many of these programs take the academic content and connect it with the real-world skills and connections to help students value the importance of the learning.  Below are a few examples of college or community-based programs in the Kent County area.

Listed below are numerous organizations that include students from multiple grade levels that promote positive character, skills and leadership development, as well as opportunities to apply the content they have learned in the classroom to real world applications.

Career and Technical Education (CTE) is the pure definition of connecting content to careers.  CTE provides technical skills, academic skills, and employability skills, in addition to helping students to understand how the things they are learning apply to the needs of employers.  Although CTE is generally an experience reserved for high school students, it is important to make sure that students in earlier grades (especially in middle school) are aware of the opportunities CTE can provide them as they develop their Educational Development Plans (EDPs).  

Kent ISD provides CTE options for students within its service area in the form of both the Kent Career Technical Center (KCTC) and the Kent Transition Center (KTC).

Back to Career Staircase

Back to main stairwayk-6 Staircase 7-8 Staircase 9-12 Staircase