Measuring Secondary CTE Program Quality: Selecting an Indicator

This brief draws on data from a 2018 national survey of State CTE Directors to help states select and adopt robust methods for measuring secondary Career Technical Education program quality, as required by the Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act. 

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Measuring Secondary CTE Program Quality: Selecting an Indicator

The Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act (Perkins V) requires state leaders to select a new accountability indicator to measure the quality of secondary Career Technical Education (CTE) programs. This option is a new feature of Perkins V and gives states the opportunity to align their accountability systems with state priorities and needs. The three options Perkins V allows for the indicator are:

1) The percentage of CTE concentrators graduating from high school having attained a recognized postsecondary credential;

2) The percentage of CTE concentrators graduating from high school having attained postsecondary credits in the relevant CTE program or program of study earned through a dual or concurrent enrollment program or another credit transfer agreement; and

3) The percentage of CTE concentrators graduating from high school having participated in work-based learning.

States can also include additional, separate measures of student success in CTE that are “statewide, valid and reliable, and comparable across the state” in addition to one of the three options listed previously.

This brief — the first in a four-part series — draws on data from a 2018 national survey of State CTE Directors to help states select and adopt robust methods for measuring secondary CTE program quality. It explores the pros and cons of each of the three options and examines different ways states are measuring and validating them.

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