Where The Work Will Be

Vocational training provides work opportunities for all

A group of adult students doing construction work to break up a concrete pathway in front of a building.
Yosemite Adult School students get some hands-on vocational training experience. Besides learning skills, students also get the benefit of industry connections when it comes time to get a job. Photo courtesy of Tony Misner.

Many assume that a four-year degree is the track to success and a life-sustaining career. But vocational training for jobs such as electricians, mechanics and chefs can provide lucrative career opportunities in far less time.

At Yosemite Adult School, students like Randy Brakke are offered a chance to learn skills that can lead to a long-term career.

Before joining the program, Brakke was a stay-at-home dad struggling to find work during the pandemic.

“With a family to support, the opportunity means a lot to me,” Brakke says.

With a family of four, Brakke needed work that could support his wife and two kids. Brakke saw posters for OSHA certification at Yosemite Adult School and decided to check it out.

Previously, Brakke worked in construction. At Yosemite Adult School, he began taking the pre-apprenticeship program to become an electrician. Thanks to the help of his instructor and mentor, Tony Misner, Brakke was able to get a job as an apprentice while he continues his training.

Brakke credits a lot of his success to Misner, who helped him get his current job and provided the support he needed to get through the pre-apprenticeship program. “I can’t speak highly enough about him,” Brakke says.

Misner says career technical education (CTE) programs can be life-changing for students like Brakke.

“The program that Randy went through is the pre-apprentice program. That’s what’s called a short-term CTE program, which is less than six months,” he says.

CTE programs are often quicker to finish and less expensive than traditional college education routes, Misner says, while still providing family-sustaining salaries. On top of that, Misner says he’s been doing this so long that he almost always has a connection for students looking for a job. That’s how he got Brakke his work as an electrician apprentice.

“I got a phone call from one of the secretaries on campus that said, ‘Hey, I have a friend who’s an electrician and they are looking for someone to mentor. Do you have anyone?’ And Randy was one of the ones that popped up,” Misner says. “He impressed every one of the three professional instructors from the trade union and I go, yeah, this is a kid that needs a break.”

Misner, who’s passionate about mentorship, says most adult education programs lose their students when they don’t make that necessary connection.

“I think a lot of those students weren’t connected to the school. They didn’t have mentorship,” Misner says. “They had teachers that were so busy teaching the curriculum that they forgot they’re teaching humans.”

It’s certainly true for Brakke, whose life drastically changed once he became an electrician apprentice. Without the guidance of instructors like Misner, Brakke says, his life would look very different.

For those who are considering taking courses at Yosemite Adult School? “Absolutely do it, take full advantage of it,” he says. “It was well worth it.”

For more information, visit https://statecenteraec.org/.

Written by Krysta Scripter.

Regions Classes
Central California Careers in Manufacturing-Construction

Share the knowledge