Our History
The concept of a multi-school
district skills center in the state of Washington began as a vision in 1966
in an old, abandoned building in the Tukwila School District and later Central
Elementary School. The Occupational Skills Center (OSC) opened as the state's
first Skills Center in the fall of 1966 as a cooperative of the Federal
Way, Highline, and Tukwila school districts. Ninety-six students arrived
that fall to participate in Medical Assisting, Commercial Foods, Plastics,
and Fashion Classes. Two years later a Marine Technology program was started
in a beach house at Seahurst Park. In 1999 the Tahoma School District joined
Highline, Federal Way, and Tukwila as part of the Skills Center Cooperative.
The Superintendents
and boards from the cooperating districts were pleased with the skills center
concept, and with strong community support for passage of a bond election,
constructed a 36,000 square foot new facility that opened in January 1972.
OSC continued to operate as the only cooperative skills center in the state
until 1977 when other skills centers opened in Bremerton, Mukilteo, and
Yakima. All the 10 current skills centers operating in Washington followed
the OSC Model.
In 1986, the campus was remodeled
an additional 27,000 square feet of classroom and laboratory space was added
to house the growing number of students in high demand industry training
programs. Approximately 800 students are now enrolled at what is currently
called Sea-Tac Occupational Skills Center. In 1977 the state legislature
provided $1.1M through the state's Capital Budget for updating and modernization
of facilities. The Skills Center was fortunate to receive a capital budget
allocation of $850,000 in 2000. The combined 1977 and 2000 allocations allowed
the skills center to add new programs and provide extended student services.
Throughout the years,
the operation of the Skills Center has had a primary focus of providing
entry-level skills training to high school juniors and seniors. The Skills
Center has the capability to start and close programs as the job market
changes. Over the past decades, new programs have been added, others have
been modified, and some have been dropped. Currently our set of courses
includes nineteen different programs, including and off-campus Marine Technology
program that operates at Seahurst Park in Burien. On-campus programs include:
| Auto Body Technology |
Engineering Design Technology |
| Automotive Technology |
Fashion Design & Marketing |
| Electronics Engineering |
Fire Services |
| Computer Network Systems |
Leadership & Management in Business |
| Construction Technology |
Marine & Environmental Science (formerly Marine Technology ) |
| Criminal Justice |
Medical Careers |
| Culinary Arts |
Translation and Interpretation |
| Dental Careers |
Veterinary Careers |
| DigiPen Video Game Programming and Animation |
VITAL |
| Digital Media Production (formerly Multimedia Information Technology) |
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In addition to vocational training,
the skills center also provides opportunity for approximately 80 students
per year to participate in a program called VITAL (Vocational Instruction
Through Applied Academic Learning) to earn a high school diploma that is
issued by their sending high school. And a new Third Session which is similar
to VITAL was added in 2004.
A summer school program was added in 1983 when the State Legislature saw
the need for students to explore careers and begin acquiring job skills
at an earlier age. As the only state-funded summer school program, Skills
Centers are able to offer training to students just completing grades eighth
through twelve. Summer school has operated for 19 consecutive years and
now serves 500-600 students every year.
When OSC was first established in 1966, the premise was that multiple
districts could provide state-of-the art workforce preparation in a cost
effective and programmatically efficient manner. That concept is as true
today as it was in 1966. The instructional strategies in place in the
Skills Centers are exactly the types of educational reforms that are being
discussed for all of education. Students in the Skills Center master their
competencies in an applied, contextual manner; receive instruction in
advancing technologies; are connected to the workforce; and are prepared
to transition to both college and work after graduation from high school.
Many students earn required academic credits along with elective vocational
credits and college credits while enrolled in Skills Center programs.
Follow-up data on skills center completers attest to the success of skills
center students, with 85%+ gainfully employed, working full or part-time,
and/or going to college one year after high school graduation.
The school changed its name to Puget Sound Skills Center (PSSC) on May 1st, 2007 at the 40th anniversary celebration. |