I mentioned in my blog post from last week describing the ETFO ICT Conference and the OTF Fall Curriculum Forum that in the same week, I had also attended the Level Up Skilled Trades Fair. I expressed hope that I'd be able to describe the experience at some point. Well, this is the post, but first, a preamble.
Background - Taking Shop in the Past
Back when I was in Grade 7 and 8, we used to take "Home Ec" and "Shop". Once a week, the intermediate division students from my school would board a bus and go to Charles Gordon P.S. so that we could have instruction in four areas: sewing, cooking, woodwork and metal.
I've written about my initial experience with sewing and how my mother's expertise unintentionally discouraged me from pursuing it until I was an adult in my 40s.
My cooking skills are not particularly impressive; thank goodness my husband is an excellent chef. I can prepare breakfast and bake a few things (although I vividly recall a cookie exchange I participated in during my first few years of teaching that lives in infamy).
Interestingly enough, my forays into woodworking and metal work were more successful. I made a little Pinocchio figure out of wood that still hangs in my parents' basement. My metal project was grander but had a sadder ending. I designed a mobile with stars hanging from a cloud, but someone stole it before I could take it home.
I am sorry that these experiences are no longer offered as part of the regular learning for intermediate division students. We try our best to replicate the experience with our STEM lab, but it's not quite the same.
TDSB Guidance Professional Learning
On November 25, I attended a board-wide workshop geared towards elementary and secondary school educators with guidance in their portfolio. It was actually very informative.
In the morning, we heard from Matt Bradley from OYAP encouraging us to promote the skilled trades. He shared some statistics, such as only 10% of 25 year-olds are still pursuing the same career they wanted at age 15.
One of the sessions in the afternoon was the opportunity to partake in some hands-on learning, supported by Central Tech students. One group had a Plumbing activity where they built a mini soccer goal out of pipes. Our group had an Electricity activity. We learned how to wire a light bulb to a switch. My colleague and friend Kim Davidson worked together and we got it to work.
Level Up Skilled Trades Career Fair - Oshawa
On Tuesday, November 18, all of the Grade 7s and 8s in my school went all the way to Oshawa to attend the Level Up Skilled Trades Career Fair. This was a great opportunity to explore all the different jobs related to the trades. There were a lot of interactive activities for the students to explore, from using miniatures to mimic landscaping plans, to building their own hula hoops with PVC pipes, from changing tires to making metal tool boxes.
I chatted with a few of the representatives there. They explained about how, as a young person entering the profession, they are well compensated and the business also provides benefits and decent pensions, two things that often aren't considered seriously until people get older. Many of the people we met make way more money than I do as a teacher with 29 years of experience and the same employer for decades.
I was so delighted with what I learned at the Oshawa Level Up Skilled Trades Career Fair that I arranged to take my son to the same event when it was held later in November in Mississauga.
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