Three upcoming high school freshmen students visited the Knoxville Chamber as part of Knox County Schools “Schooled for Success” program.
This program’s purpose is to introduce entering HS freshman to career opportunities. The program is conducted each year after school gets out at various local businesses.
The student’s that participated in the Chamber's events were Abby Burroughs, Carter Middle School; Preston Johnson, Holston Middle School; and Marc Cooper, Powell Middle School.
The student’s spent two work days at the Chamber offices, during which time they had a tour of the building, interviewed staff members in various departments, conducted an internet scavenger hunt of the Chamber website and completed a project. The project was to create a brochure that can be used by the school counselors to help students understand what the chamber does and why it is important to the region.
The Education and Workforce Summit will take place on March 24 at 8 a.m. in the Knoxville Convention Center.
Everyone in the community is welcome and encouraged to come -- parents, educators, students, business people, community leaders and faith-based institutions.
To register, click here.
The goals of the daylong summit are to outline what the region's future workforce looks like, to identify the barriers that may be standing in the way of achieving such a workforce, and for each attendee to leave with a plan of how he or she can individually contribute to the overall goal of developing a skilled and educated workforce.
Knoxville's workforce and education initiatives are being noticed by bloggers around the country.
Ed Morrison of Cleveland, Ohio, praises in his "Brewed Fresh Daily" blog the Knoxville Chamber and local business community's initiatives in workforce development and education.
Morrison writes, "When it comes to leadership in education and workforce, here’s what chamber involvement looks like. The Knoxville Chamber and its volunteers have developed a framework of the skills and attributes that will be required to ensure the economic advancement of this area. They are now beginning to build an education process that drives in that direction."
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