News Release

May 4, 2005
Central Tech Sponsors
High School Pre-Engineering Program

Engineers: Think globally. Serve the poor. Enable trade. Engineer a new vehicle. Improve living standards. Design toys or Basic Utility Vehicles (BUV).

Projects associated to these areas could present the greatest challenge (and fun) ever had in school! Yet, according to research by the National Alliance for Pre-Engineering Programs the drop out rate in colleges of engineering and engineering technology programs exceeds 50 percent in the first two years.

Two contributing factors for this high number are that students do not have an understanding of what engineers do and they did not take the right combination of high school courses to prepare them to succeed in this rigorous course of study, according to Judy Robinson, Assistant Superintendent, Central Technology Center .

Pre-engineering programs are now operating in seven of Oklahoma 's technology centers and 57 of their partner high schools. To help students who are interested in an engineering career to be successful, Oklahoma 's Career Tech system is now partnering with the National Alliance for Pre-Engineering Programs/Project Lead the Way (PTLW). This initiative offers a sequence of pre-engineering courses.

Project Lead the Way is currently in 41 states and Washington D.C. with more than 120,000 students enrolled at 1,000+ school sites.

More than 400 Oklahoma high school students are enrolled in pre-engineering programs at Central Tech, Drumright; Gordon Cooper, Shawnee ; Great Plains, Lawton ; Francis Tuttle and Metro Tech, Oklahoma City ; Moore Norman; and Tulsa Tech.

“The goal is to help students be successful in engineering degreed programs and postsecondary engineering technology programs and create some excitement about engineering as a possible career,” Robinson said.

These high school students are on the technology center campuses for three hours each day, and at their home schools for the remainder of their academics.

Students in the pre-engineering program complete a sequence of foundational pre-engineering courses and all take a senior capstone engineering course. They are also expected to complete a specific sequence of math and science courses as part of the pre-engineering program.

“While building the pre-engineering model, several Oklahoma universities and colleges have offered strong curriculum recommendations and been involved in the planning and implementation process,” Robinson said.

One of the reasons the Career Tech system is appropriate to take on engineering academies for high school students are the connections we have with business and industry across the state,” according to LaDonna Gear, Assistant Director for the Drumright campus which houses Central Tech's Pre-Engineering Academy, now completing its first year.

While partner high schools do an excellent job of teaching math and science, an additional dimension is added through this program at technology centers by integrating engineering into math and science curriculum.

“We are at an advantage because of the nature of our programs, which are not only for high school students, but for adults and business and industry. Because of that we have electronics, mechanical, manufacturing and drafting instructors on our staff,” Gear said. “These instructors, as well as our academic instructors, collaborate in the pre-engineering academy by lending their special expertise to enrich the pre-engineering instruction.

“Our role as a technology center is to help ensure engineering students find success in college,” Gear said. “Prospective engineering students must understand the differences between the various engineering tracks, such as civil, mechanical and electrical. They must also be able to apply math, science and problem solving skills to the engineering processes.”

The Career Tech mission and technology centers' primary goal is to prepare Oklahomans for the workplace, education and life.

"This goal is a little different," Robinson said. "It's to prepare high school students who have the desire to become an engineer to have success in their goal to graduate from a university as an engineer."

“Our student's success is our real test,” Gear said.

For more information about the Central Tech's Engineering Technology programs, call 918-352-2551, ext. 251.