Career Exploration Mega-Fairs
Tennessee schools are conducting bigger and better annual career exploration fairs. Fair coordinators report that health professionals from local hospitals and other provider organizations often mount the most compelling and popular exhibits.
The criteria for a successful fair, according to experts like Laurene McLemore of the Tennessee Department of Education, and Jackie Tucker, school counselor at Gibson County High School, include:
The Gibson County Career Fair is a collaborative, three-day career development event that rotates annually among five school districts (Bradford, Gibson County, Milan, Humboldt and Trenton). Each year, there is a different location and chairperson. Exhibitors, selected by individual school guidance counselors, represent each of Tennessee’s school-to-career clusters and 60-70 careers, along with the armed services. The clusters are:
Day 1 is a college fair for juniors and seniors. Days 2-3 are career fairs for students in grades 8, 10 and 12. In October 2002, nearly 3,000 attended the college day and over 1,800 attended the career fair. Eighth grade students are bused in from nine middle schools for the experience. Most students are allowed 45 minutes at the fair. Access is limited to 250 students at a time to ensure a high quality experience for all participants.
Separate career exploration activities are conducted for 9th and 11th graders. "Students can lose interest if they go every year," said Jackie Tucker. "We always try to give them something new each time they attend." One year the students’ assignment was a scavenger hunt that required them to interrogate presenters with specific questions. The hunt was a hit, especially with 12th graders, Tucker said. Winners went home with home game season passes.
Popular exhibitors have included:
Presenters seem to enjoy the event as much as the students, according to Tucker. Competition is keen among organizations that want to present at the fair. Many come from afar; one meteorologist drove 100 miles to attend. For more information, contact Jackie Tucker, 901-742-3153.
Other benchmark career fairs in Tennessee include the Williamson County World of Possibilities Career Fair. Link goes to www.wcs.edu/careerfair/ Every eighth grade student in the county, including private and home schooled students, is invited—approximately 3,000 in all. The successful inaugural event was held in April 2003, followed by another event in November 18, 2003. Preparation for the fair, attendance and graded assignments are coordinated through the school district’s career counseling curriculum. Most attendees complete a computerized career interest and aptitude inventory in advance. This time, students also received advance information about presenters and pocket folders to organize handouts.
Williamson Medical Center was an "awesome" presenter in April, according to Jackie Baggett, coordinator for career and technical education for Williamson County schools. The hospital presented a series of exhibits spotlighting different units and departments. "At one point, it was so crowded around their exhibits, students were sitting in a circle on the floor, listening to the presenters," Baggett reported. The medical center won the fair’s Best of Show award.
For more information about the fair, click here or go to www.wcs.edu/careerfair/. Contact Pam Wells, nurse educator at Williamson Medical Center, for information about the hospital’s winning display, PWELLS@wmed.org, 615-595-4533.
Chattanooga’s Career Crunch: A job awareness fair hosted 3,800 eighth graders in October 2002. The Chattanooga Chamber of Commerce sponsors this annual two-day event. Students were invited to visit at least three "career role models," armed with questions about education requirements, salary and job satisfaction. For more information, contact Mattie Moran, chamber director of education and workforce development, mmoran@chattanoogachamber.com, 423-763-4339.
Seventeen East Tennessee hospitals collaborated to produce The AMAZING Healthcare Career Expo in Knoxville on February 12, 2003. Over 800 high school students and adults attended. The Expo was sponsored by Baptist Health System of East Tennessee, Blount Memorial Hospital, Coordinated Health Services, Covenant Health, East Tennessee Children’s Hospital, St. Mary’s Health System and the University of Tennessee Medical Center. For more information about the Expo, contact Jill England, Coordinated Health Services, 865-675-1664, jill@chsgpo.com.
South Carolina’s Commission on Higher Education has produced a web site based on Gear Up, a discretionary federal grant initiative. Gear Up is a five-year program designed to increase the number of low-income students who graduate from post-secondary institutions. Starting with seventh graders, its components include lesson plans, career fairs and college fairs. The web site includes a how-to guide for career fair coordinators. Download free from http://www.power2earn.com/coord/index.htm. activate link
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From web site at http://www.wcs.edu/careerfair/