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What Is Voc Ed's Role?
The question is whether vocational education should concentrate on preparing students for a specific job or whether it should be more focused on broader career development, including lifelong learning, employability, and cognitive skills.
When asked to describe the role of vocational education in the schooling of the nation's workforce, most educators (and citizens) would say it is to prepare students for work in a given trade or vocational area.
What Should Medical Assistant Students Learn???
The nature of today's workplace is different from that of the past. It is characterized by global competition, cultural diversity, new technologies, and new management processes that require workers to have critical thinking, problem-solving and communication skills as well as advanced levels of job skills.
Medical assistant students should learn more than just skills related to the job and the health care industry. They should be exposed to administrative, interpersonal and clinical skills which will prepare them with the technical ability and versatility needed to establish careers in the field of allied health services.
They should also learn how to be well rounded professionals, good citizens, and also a little bit about themselves and their limitations, along with fundamentals of patient care, medical office tasks, medical terminology, disease processes, and basic pharmacology. Also:
1. Reading and writing medical terminology, and computation
2. Oral communication
3. Carefully listen, and following directions
4. Creative thinking and problem solving
5. Personal management (self-esteem, goal setting, motivation, personal/career development)
6. Group effectiveness (interpersonal skills, negotiation, teamwork)
7. Being meticulous, and finishing work on time
8. Organizational effectiveness and leadership
Some educators believe that this new and emerging workplace eliminates the viability of vocational education programs that concentrate solely on the acquisition of job skills. They contend that vocational education should concentrate more broadly on all aspects of their students' career development--that it should expand its focus by initiating programs that prepare students with the "basic academic skills, the teachability and flexibility, the commitment to lifelong learning that permits them to rapidly change in ways required by new organizations of work or content changes in the processes and performances of work" (Herr 1995, p. 5).
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