Dilip-da,

Ofcourse Indian polytechnics are for high school graduates. Even in US I had a 
roommate in DC (from Bollywood) - now staying in Hollywood - who still has a 
Mumbai polytechnic diploma - plus some years work ex. - now on US skilled 
worker visa.
Umesh
.
I had missed this part of your post:

***
Netters,


  We are looking at a project to link "US high schools for career" to technical 
education in Assam, kind of sister school association. The graduates of such 
schools will not be engineers but technicians. We believe technicians have a 
bigger role to play in assam as entrepreneurs than engineers. I do have a few 
questions.

    
   Do polytechnics take in high school graduates? 

   Or Is a polytechnic diploma the same as a high school diploma?
   How about the Industrial Training Institutes (ITI)? 

   Are the entering students high school graduates?

If a well meaning netter could send the syllabuses for polytechnic education 
and ITI education, it would help us to compare against what successful high 
schools in USA are doing.


  Any information we can get will help in aligning the programs.
  
Thanks,
  Dilip Deka
Dilip/Dil Deka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Is there anyone in Assamnet who is 
directly involved in vocational training whether in Assam or anywhere else? 
Please email me - we may have some serious business to talk about.
  Dilip Deka
  ===================================================
   
  A smart path — that isn't 'college' 
  By Ben Brown
  If we're so big on measuring results in education, isn't it time to get 
serious about an approach that links knowledge and training with good-paying 
jobs?
  The time is ripe. Hardly a week goes by without another warning from a 
business or education-reform group that too many of our students graduate 
without the skills to compete in a global marketplace. And when the nation's 
governors meet in February for a National Education Summit, high on the agenda 
is a discussion of new strategies for helping  students "build bridges between 
high school, college and work."
  The trouble is, if you try to bring vocational education into the discussion, 
the first thing that enters many folks' minds are the guys in last-period shop 
class, the ones who seemto know their way around an engine block, but not 
algebra II. Fonzie in Happy Days, the 1970s sitcom set in the 1950s, was a 
voc-ed guy — cool, but not what parents hold up as a career role model. 
Everybody knew Fonzie wasn't headed to college. And college is the one sure 
path to the good life, right?
  A skewed view of college
  Well, yes and no. Yes, if you're willing to morph your concept of college to 
include other post-secondary educational opportunities, from community colleges 
to tech schools to professional- certification and workplace-training programs. 
Occupational certification has increased by 50% during the past decade,  
according to a recent study by the National Center for Public Policy and Higher 
Education.
  No, if you're talking about only four-year institutions, where a third of 
students don't qualify for degrees in six years.
  "The last thing we need is another college dropout, saddled with student 
loans and looking for a job without a marketable skill," says Gerry Hogan, a 
volunteer advocate for vocational education and the chairman of Endurance 
Business Media.
  Clide Cassity, director of Pinellas Technical Education Centers in Florida, 
adds, "Yet somehow we've gotten ourselves in the situation where we believe 
that college is all that counts, that nothing else matters."
  Even though good jobs increasingly require what used to be college-level 
training, most still don't demand four-year degrees. Of the U.S. Bureau of 
Labor Statistics' estimates of the fastest-growing  occupations between 2002 
and 2012, the top 10 don't require bachelor's degrees. And many non-degree 
occupations crying out for workers are career fields with salaries that can 
support healthy families — provided employees have higher level skills.
  Kay Martin, CEO of the Francis Tuttle Oklahoma Technology Center in Oklahoma 
City, says students who graduate in Tuttle's automotive program "after a few 
years can earn $100,000." And there are similar career opportunities in health 
technology, the construction trades and public safety.
  In an era of outsourcing, here's more good news: These high-skill jobs aren't 
going anywhere. You're not going to call someone in India to fix your car or 
your plumbing. And if your house is on fire in Ohio, help is not coming from 
Mexico.
  A' real-world' advantage
  Career and technical education — the term voc-ed pros have  adopted to avoid 
the Fonzie factor — has the advantage of relevance. For many students, 
"academics suddenly make sense," says Robin White, president of the Great Oaks 
Institute of Technology and Career Development in Cincinnati. "Geometry makes 
more sense in construction technology than just drawing circles and squares on 
paper." And the best programs can tout real-world accountability. 
  Tom Applegate, executive dean of Austin Community College, says, "All our 
programs are labor-market driven. If employers don't want our grads, we don't 
want the program."
  In Florida, Cassity has lines at both ends of some Pinellas Tech programs: 
Students wait for class slots, and companies wait to hire them. Two-thirds of 
Pinellas Tech students complete requirements for professional certification or 
state licensing, and 82% end up employed in their field of study.
  So what's not to like about voc-ed?  "It's the high schools that have run 
amok," says Phyllis Hudecki, executive director of the Oklahoma Business and 
Education Council, a non-profit education advocacy group. Even its defenders 
acknowledge that, in the past, voc-ed has been used "as an avoidance mechanism 
for kids who couldn't do academic work," Hudecki says. "And that's still out 
there. I want to make sure students are really learning, and then turn them 
loose" in voc-ed tracks.
  Approaches such as the Southern Regional Education Board's "High Schools That 
Work" project have proved that integrating vocational education with academic 
courses can accelerate achievement at the high school level. The trick is 
combining a no-compromise academic program with vocational education that 
matches students with business mentors and that guarantees them career and 
academic counseling. That may be tough for stressed-out high schools, but it's 
doable.
  Easier to  model are proven post-secondary programs such as Cassity's in 
Florida and Applegate's in Texas. They fight for funding, yet they have track 
records business leaders and legislators should admire. So why not reward them 
for delivering what the market needs?
  The demand for trained — and retrained — workers is only going to increase, 
perhaps in unexpected ways.
  "Our fastest-growing group of students by percentage," Applegate says, "is 
those with master's degrees."
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Umesh Sharma

Washington D.C. 

1-202-215-4328 [Cell]

Ed.M. - International Education Policy
Harvard Graduate School of Education,
Harvard University,
Class of 2005

http://www.uknow.gse.harvard.edu/index.html (Edu info)

http://hbswk.hbs.edu/ (Management Info)




www.gse.harvard.edu/iep  (where the above 2 are used )




http://jaipurschool.bihu.in/
       
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