While the CNMIs private and public sectors are heightening efforts to
craft programs that will develop the islands future workforce, the
latest survey among public middle and high school students show that
careers available on the islands are not among their top choices.Design
and order your own custom rfidtag with
personalized message and artwork.The results of the PSS Occupational
Survey have dismayed education officials, who discovered that most
students dream of big-money jobs that they believe they will find
outside the Commonwealth.
The expected exodus of foreign workers
from the CNMI next year due to new immigration policies has spurred
efforts to prepare the local workforce to take over jobs that will be
left vacant. With tourism being the islands main industry, the field of
food preparation and service is one area that directly ties with
tourism. However, majority of those surveyed, who are on the cusp of
being the islands next generation of workers, are not interested in
these lines of work.
This then begs the question: Who will take
over the jobs of the islands foreign workers when these workers are
phased out come December 2014?Also, with tourism on the rebound and more
hotels expected to open up in the years ahead, the need for cooks,
waiters, bartenders, and other entry level positions are expected to
surge and the lack of interest for these jobs among the young could
affect the ability of tourism-related businesses to find sufficient
workers for their operations.
According to Michaelle Mu?a,You will see earcap ,
competitive price and first-class service. the students representative
on the Board of Education, the low interest for some of the career
choices may be due to the students limited knowledge and exposure to
these fields.She said that many students want to pursue higher education
to achieve their dream careers, which she described as big-money jobs.
Although
the data speaks about the intention of many students to pursue higher
education, Education Commissioner Rita A. Sablan, Ed.D., said there
remains a concern that many of them want to pursue fields and careers
that are not either available on island or are not much needed in the
CNMI.According to the survey, the students lack of interest in many of
the career options were tied directly to their perception that these
jobs offer low pay compared to the amount of effort put in to the actual
work.
Because PSS offers various career technological
educational courses at its secondary schools, BOE chair Herman T.
Guerrero pointed out the need to go deeper into the result of the survey
in order to better gauge students.The survey provided
student-respondents 10 different occupations that are not only available
but are very much needed by existing industries in the CNMI. These
include food preparation and serving related; management; installation,
maintenance, and repair; office and administrative support; construction
and extraction; building, ground cleaning and maintenance; sales and
related; major title production; protective service; and business and
financial operations.
Of the total 2,956 respondents, the
results show that only 165 students want to be in the food preparation
and serving related field. In comparison, 474 respondents want to be in
protective service, which includes fields such as police and
investigation agents.Another notable result is that only 60 students out
of the nearly 3,000 respondents are willing to work in construction
with.
At Marianas High School, out of 940 respondents, a total
of 511or 54 percentsay they want to pursue postsecondary education and
have no plans of immediately working in any of the given occupational
opportunities.Generating the most interest among the occupational
choices was protective service where 127 studentsor 14 percentsay they
want to work in the future.
Those who reported that they want to
work in installation, maintenance, and repair work totaled 83 studentsa
mere 9 percent. Other areas like business and financial operations got
only 7 percent while food preparation and serving related got a
minuscule 4 percent, Management had 3 percent; sales, 3 percent; and
construction and building/ground maintenance, 1 percent each.
At
Saipan Southern High School, out of the 398 respondents, a large bulk
of 181 studentsor 45 percentsay they will pursue college; 63 students
(16 percent) want to be in protective services; 40 respondents said they
want to work in business and financial operations; while 26 students
want to work in the field of management.
The results for Kagman
High School also showed a similar trend, with 41 percent of respondents
wanting to pursue higher education and many students picking the field
of protective service among their top option.Tidy up wires with ease
with offershidkits and tie guns at cheap discounted prices.We offer the biggest collection of old masters that can be turned into hand painted cleanersydney on canvas. In KHS, 360 students responded to the survey.More than 80 standard commercial and granitetiles exist
to quickly and efficiently clean pans.In middle schools, a total of 216
out of 720 students say they want to pursue college while 91 aim to be
in protective service one day. Chacha Oceanview had a total of 213
respondents, of which 51 want to pursue higher education while a big
bulk of students (72) want to become police and investigative agents.
Only 23 students want to be in food preparation.
Students in
Rota and Tinian secondary schools also want to pursue higher education
and, no surprise here, protective service also came out as their top
career choice.Tinian Junior & Senior High School had 134
respondents, of which 56 want to go to college; 22 want to be in
protective service. Only 10 want to be in food preparation, while only a
few want to be in other fields such as construction, sales, and
maintenance.
The events included a meeting Friday with
supporters in Glenarden for which people were asked to bring supplies
for a Capitol Heights shelter for women and children, restoring a
playground in Silver Spring on Saturday, cleaning up marshlands in
Cambridge on Sunday and reading with campers at a summer program in
Baltimore on Monday.
When they did she would swoop screaming,
Who brings cookies into a building? It got much darker later, Ruby says
but that isnt something she is ready to share.While Ruby has long known
the seeds of her despair were sown in childhood she came to realise that
analysing the past was not preventing repeated episodes of depression.
She decided the answer lay in probing the mind itself rather than
repeatedly dissecting the often dark thoughts it produces.
I
have always been very curious about this stuff, she says. In fact long
before she ran away to England in 1977 and joined the Royal Shakespeare
Company she studied psychology and drama at Berkeley, University of
California.
She had heard about mindfulness and five years ago
when the signs of another descent into depression began she sought out
Mark Williams, an international authority and Professor of clinical
psychology at Oxford. He kind of knew I was in trouble, she says and
agreed to take her through an eight-week course to teach her the basics.
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