(1) The program requires that successful candidates:
(a) demonstrate knowledge of a curriculum and curriculum design consistent with current national and Montana standards, including:
(i) a mission statement with stated goals and objectives that reflect the intent of industrial/technology education programs, as guided by national professional organizations;
(ii) an organized set of concepts, processes, and systems that are technological in nature; and
(iii) content orientated toward technology education (TE) or industrial technology (IT);
(b) demonstrate knowledge of content area(s) in which the candidate teaches, including:
(i) fundamental knowledge about the development of technology, its effects on people, the environment, and society;
(ii) information about industry's organization, personnel systems, techniques, resources, products, and social impacts;
(iii) communication technology, which includes information-related technology that uses resources to transfer information and to extend human potential;
(iv) construction technology, which includes physical-related technology that uses resources to build structures or construct work on site;
(v) manufacturing technology, which includes physical-related technology using resources to extract and convert raw/recycled materials into industrial and consumer goods;
(vi) transportation technology, which includes physical-related technology using transportation technologies to maintain contact and exchange among individuals and societal units through the movement of material, goods, and people; and
(vii) identification of a level and scope of entry level skills in the use of tools, instruments, and machines necessary for successful teaching;
(c) demonstrate knowledge of quality workmanship;
(d) develop insight and understanding in the application of technological concepts, processes, and systems;
(e) develop and demonstrate skills in utilizing tools, materials, machines, processes, and technical concepts relative to content organizers, safely and efficiently;
(f) demonstrate skills, creative abilities, positive self-concepts, and individual potentials relating to technology;
(g) demonstrate problem-solving and decision-making abilities involving human and material resources and technological processes and systems;
(h) demonstrate activity-oriented laboratory instruction that reinforces abstract concepts with concrete experiences;
(i) demonstrate knowledge and skills regarding how technological systems function and the attitudes to evaluate those systems;
(j) demonstrate knowledge of past, present, and future technological systems by applying knowledge and skills developed in the study of other systems;
(k) apply and use other content knowledge (e.g., mathematics, science, history) to technology to solve individual and social problems;
(l) introduce career opportunities in industrial/technology and related fields and encourage and advise students about postsecondary options;
(m) demonstrate knowledge of educational environments in the classroom and laboratory that enhance student learning;
(n) select and apply appropriate instructional strategies for individual and group instruction;
(o) demonstrate knowledge of and apply laboratory management skills (e.g., maintaining inventory, filing, requisitioning equipment and materials, maintenance, and budgeting);
(p) develop and use lesson plans and organize materials to meet the learning needs of students;
(q) develop and implement classroom management consistent with school policy;
(r) demonstrate the development of personal and leadership competencies (e.g., citizenship, personal development, goal setting, parliamentary procedure, and teamwork);
(s) articulate industrial/technology education to school and community publics;
(t) develop and coordinate an external advisory committee for the program;
(u) demonstrate knowledge of how to gain access to services and financial resources available from state and federal agencies and operate within applicable laws and regulations governing education;
(v) develop students' abilities to search, access, retrieve, synthesize, and apply information; and
(w) provide opportunities for students with work-related experience useful for employment entry after graduation.