Arlington Tech Capstone Experience is the culmination of an Arlington Tech student’s cross-curricular project-based learning and career development. Capstone Experience provides the student a gateway to apply and to advance her or his knowledge, technical expertise, and research skills learned in Career and Technical Education (CTE) courses within an authentic real-world business and industry settings. Students may complete the Capstone Experience in one or three ways:
- As paid or unpaid intern in a job placement relevant to the student’s career pathway (working on-the-job site), (1 to 3 variable credits based on hours worked) *
- Asa project manager/consultant working for a client to deliver a product or to solve a problem (working on-the-job site or at school)
- As a research assistant at a university, government organization, or non-profit (working on-the-job site or at school)
Capstone Experience continues to develop the student’s knowledge and skill in their chosen career path, or to further research study within her or his area of interest. Students are responsible for securing a Capstone placement during the 11th grade year with the support of the Capstone Coordinator. A work-based training plan is then developed by the student, Capstone Coordinator, and workplace mentor to guide the student’s work-based learning experiences and assist in evaluating achievement and performance. The Capstone Coordinator and the student’s mentor facilitate the student’s work-based learning experience and assist in evaluating her or his achievement and performances during the 12th grade year. When the student enrolls in the Capstone Experience course, the parent or legal guardian, workplace mentor, student, and APS staff signs an MOU that grants full legal consent that the student has permission to participate in all aspects of the Capstone Experience. It is recommended that student has one to two work release periods at the end of the school day to facilitate Capstone Experience job placement. This will be a requirement for Arlington Tech students.