Vocational and Occupational Training of Non-College Bound Youth [electronic resource] / Robert Evans, Jr.

This analysis originally prepared for the Japan Study Meeting, held November 1985, compares high school graduates in the United States and Japan who will not attend college, and includes directions of vocational training in both countries. Vocational training in the United States involves five areas...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via ERIC)
Main Author: Evans, Robert, Jr
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: [S.l.] : Distributed by ERIC Clearinghouse, 1986.
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Description
Summary:This analysis originally prepared for the Japan Study Meeting, held November 1985, compares high school graduates in the United States and Japan who will not attend college, and includes directions of vocational training in both countries. Vocational training in the United States involves five areas: secondary schools, post-secondary schools, proprietary schools, formal apprenticeships, and employee training programs. Course areas divide into types of institutions, race, and sex. Females are represented most in office and health occupations. Males are over-represented in agriculture, technical trades, and industrial occupation training programs. Transition to the full-time labor force is discussed. Information on Japanese youth cites fewer public vocational opportunities and similar sex ratios in curriculum choices, but finds the employees to be the main source of vocational education rather than post-secondary training institutions, and mentions greater use of employment services to secure post-school employment. The report finds there is not a close relationship between types of training received and the occupation in which an individual is engaged. The report concludes with 19 tables of data and four pages of references. (CC)
Item Description:ERIC Document Number: ED271403.
Sponsoring Agency: Office of Educational Research and Improvement (ED), Washington, DC.
ERIC Note: For other studies in this series on education in Japan, see SO 017 338 and SO 017 443-460.
Educational level discussed: High Schools.
Educational level discussed: Postsecondary Education.
Physical Description:73 p.
Audience:Researchers.
Policymakers.