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Year 2000
Background Petit Jean College is located in the rural
Arkansas County of Conway or City of Morrilton, a primarily agrarian community
of about 12,000 with a large manufacturing sector. In February 1999 two
factories closed, leaving hundreds of workers unemployed - many of whom were
middle-aged females, without high school diplomas or any other type of work
experience. Most had worked for twenty years in the factories, making less than
$20,000 per year.
The Numbers By fall 1999 many of those
laid-off factory workers were successful Networking Academy program students at
Petit Jean. The first class - a combined semester one and two - had 30 students,
two-thirds were female and 29 of 30 completed the semester. In one year, four
sections of the Networking Academy program have had an average of 59% female
students, with a 94% retention rate in the Networking Academy program semesters
one through four. The male retention was nearly as high - 86%.
How did the Petit Jean College Networking Academy program
successfully recruit and retain female students, many of whom were laid-off
factory workers with no computer experience and limited math and reading skills?
Recruitment
Petit Jean College proactively recruited for its new Networking Academy
program by:
- making presentations to soon to be laid off factory workers;
- hanging posters in local shops;
- running ads on local radio stations;
- advertising in the local newspaper;
- giving tours of the Cisco lab to potential applicants;
- working collaboratively and seeking referrals from the local Private
Industry Council and Department of Human Services.
Pre-Technology Classes Petit Jean and
the factory workers were in agreement that the soon-to-be-new students needed to
upgrade their skills in math and English and learn the basics of computing. To
accomplish this, Petit Jean:
- Developed a computer literacy curriculum. This four-week course ran three
days per week, two hours per day. Computer skills included keyboarding, Windows,
Word, Excel, Access and Survival DOS;
- Developed a math for technology curriculum that covered elementary math
through pre-algebra. The math course was taught four hours per day for five
weeks;
- Provided an adult education and GED (General Equivalency Diploma) course for
students needing remedial math and English assistance.
Over 500 students were served in three months time across each of these
classes, each classroom had 18 to 20 students.
These classes were a joint effort of the Chamber of Commerce, the Economic
Development Council and the Private Industry Council who funded it with
dislocated worker funds.
Prerequisites Petit Jean College had no
prerequisites for its Networking Academy program students but all are required
to take one semester of math beyond college algebra to graduate with an
Associate's degree. They can either take calculus or discrete math, which is the
math inside a computer.
Success in the
Classroom
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"Many of the women haven't worked on cars, so they aren't used to tinkering,
that doesn't mean they can't learn it."
-Sam Justus, CNAP Instructor, Petit
Jean |
Sam Justus, the Networking Academy program instructor for Petit Jean, doesn't
see any real differences between his female and male students, except maybe
experience and technique. During the first three weeks of the Networking Academy
program, he spends time on the basics, such as finding IP addresses and
identification and use of tools. He points out that most of the women are not
tool savvy because they haven't spent time working on their cars or fixing
things. He also noticed that some women didn't have the hand strength needed to
squeeze the crimpers used for crossover cables, so he substituted ratchet
crimpers that could be operated with two hands. While that worked for most of
the women, some still could not manage it, so he instructed them to use their
feet for leverage - a technique that worked.
Job Placement Petit Jean is near to
graduating its first class of Networking Academy program students. While many
will have to leave their community to find employment, Mr. Justus believes
others will find jobs close by in related industries, such as
telecommunications. For most of the students, it will be their first opportunity
to earn a salary that is higher than the minimum wage.
Contact Sam Justus Cisco Networking
Academy Program Petit Jean College Morrilton, Arkansas Justus@petit-jean.pjtc.tec.ar.us
501-977-2034
School Web site http://www.state.ar.us/pjc/
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