The apprentices

By Alex Powers, Staff Photographer
Monday, October 20, 2008 | 5 comment(s)

New teacher brings vocational construction program

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NORTH BEND — Under weight of budget constraints, North Bend High School cut vocational classes for decades. Trade classes such as forestry, electricity, construction and mechanics withered and died while the surviving classes — metals and woods — were scaled back.

Principal Bill Lucero had been looking for a way to bring some of that back. He wanted to start a new construction class. This year, he found his opportunity when the school hired English teacher Rick Taylor.

“We’d been talking about it for several years. He just happened to be the perfect candidate,” Lucero said.

Among other credentials, Taylor has been a professional contractor for 20 years. He taught a building and maintenance class at Douglas High School in Winston for 15 years. When he agreed to teach a similar program at North Bend, the school jumped at the opportunity to budget for tools and schedule a construction class.

The vocational class provides students with hands-on experience, which Taylor said gives his kids skills that they can take to a contractor or even use when improving their own homes.

Taylor also teaches his students the business and community networking aspects of construction work.

“They’ll certainly be able to do their own work,” he said.

The class is a block class, meaning it fills two periods in a row, and is scheduled only once during the school day. Taylor spends the rest of the day teaching English, and his students go about filling their basic math and language requirements.

But for about two hours each day, teacher and roughly two dozen students come together to work.

Taylor uses a direct approach with his pupils as he hands out fix-it assignments or work orders.

“I need five men to go to Clyde Allen,” he said Tuesday afternoon as the class gathered.

The veteran teacher spent several minutes discussing projects — fence patching at North Bend Middle School, some painting and patching work on the high school campus and work in the dugouts at Clyde Allen Baseball Stadium. He then split students into groups and sent them on their way.

Students trooped across campus and down several flights of stairs to the workshop where they collected hand tools. Several teens piled into a pickup Taylor donated to the program and drove to Clyde Allen with lumber and power tools. Several more walked, pliers in hand, toward North Bend Middle School where they planned to reinforce fences.

“I’m hoping to learn every stage of building and framing a house, so I can work for myself,” said sophomore Ty Thurman said. “I’m interested in contracting. I want to start my own company.”

The program is still in its infancy, but the construction class already is drawing support from the community.

“We’ve had a lot of positive feedback from area building supply stores and local builders,” Taylor said.

Coos Head Builders Supply in North Bend donated $550 in lumber to the class, and several local contractors have expressed interest in giving students live demonstrations or even first-hand experience performing construction work.

The high school has several large storage sheds and new roofs planned as projects for the construction class, but will have to wait on permits from the city.

The results of the classwork already is visible in the halls at the high school, and Taylor remains optimistic.

“We’ve got a lot of different projects that will offer a variety of building skills,” he said.

“They’re going to have enough skills that they will consider building trades as a vocation.”
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sweet-female wrote on Feb 2, 2009 2:37 PM:

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FINE!!!!!!!!!!!
I LOVE YOU

dan wrote on Oct 21, 2008 10:31 AM:

Great! As usual Mr Lucero has the best interest of the students in mind.

fnord wrote on Oct 21, 2008 7:41 AM:

This is the best thing to happen for the kids of Coos County, ever. It would be great if it expanded to other schools, as well. My dad was a high school industrial arts teacher until the mid 1980s in California. Good thing he was, or I never would have learned some of the skills I learned, because by the time I got to high school, the programs were gone.

ononomous wrote on Oct 20, 2008 3:15 PM:

Kudos! It would be wonderful if all the school districts would allow this to happen. Not every kid wants to sit behind a computer when "they grow up".
It seems this could also cut down on expenses of hiring outside help to do these tasks...and give the kids a work ethic, which a lot don't have these days.

retired guidance counselor wrote on Oct 20, 2008 12:19 PM:

I'm very glad to see that North Bend has started this class. Not everyone will go to college nor do they need to if they can develop a skilled trade. We will always need plumbers, carpenters and others with these skills. In New York State, where I am from, they have something called the Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES). While that school provides special education services to member districts like the SED does here, it also provides vocational education. Programs offered include things like heavy equipment, cosmetology, Licensed Practical Nursing, secretarial, carpentry, masonry, auto mechanics,auto body, welding, child care and electronics. Students attend these programs for half days during their junior and senior years. The advantage of this system is that by sending students to a central location from around a county there are enough students to populate a class and the member districts jointly finance the necessary equipment and staff. I have often thought it a shame that a similar system does not exist in Oregon.


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