Education

N.Y. Regents Offer Employment Cures

May 05, 1982 1 min read
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Calling youth unemployment New York’s most serious social problem, the state’s Board of Regents has outlined a number of steps the public and private sectors can take to better prepare young people for work.

The Regents’ proposals, based on a year-long study of the youth-unemployment problem in the state, included greater business and community involvement in the schools; more after-school vocational programs; and a greater emphasis on basic reading and mathematics skills to ensure that students are minimally qualified to find and hold jobs.

The study noted that 454,000 young people in New York--15.5 percent of all residents between the ages of 16 and 24--were unemployed and not in school during 1980.

According to the study, white youths between the ages of 16 and 19 had an 18-percent jobless rate in that year, while the figure for minorities was 39 percent.--T.T.

A version of this article appeared in the May 05, 1982 edition of Education Week as N.Y. Regents Offer Employment Cures

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