ABC’s of Career Pathways. A Better Future For Wisconsin Healthy communities with successful...
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ABC’s of Career Pathways
A Better Future For Wisconsin
Healthy communities with
successful businesses
providing good jobs
Improved supply of
skilled workers for Wisconsin businesses
Reliable, relevant &
realistic ways for lower-skill adults to gain
skills for better jobs
Pathway to the Middle Class
“…Postsecondary education or training has become the threshold requirement for access to middle-class status and earnings in good times and in bad. It is no longer the preferred pathway to middle-class jobs—it is, increasingly, the only pathway.”
-- Help Wanted: Projections of Jobs and Education Requirements Through 2018, Carnevale, Smith, Strohl, 2010.
Education Required for Wisconsin Jobs
Wisconsin’s Forgotten Middle-Skills Jobs, National Skills Coalition, 2009. Calculated from WI Department of Workforce Development data.
Wisconsin’s Workforce of Tomorrow is in the Workforce Today
From WI Department of Administration population projections, 2008
3,183,170, or 89% of 2015 group
2,795,320, or 78% of 2020 group
2,355,500, or 66% of 2025 group
Labor Force Stagnates; Skills Needed
Wisconsin’s labor force has stopped growing Baby-boomers retiring (big portion of labor force) Young people entering labor force at lower rate
(education)Unless productivity increases, economy could
stagnate Productivity commonly (not always) tied to earnings With flat labor force, increased production of goods
and services depends on productivity gains
Impact of Aging Population on Wisconsin’s Workforce, Dept. Workforce Development Office of Economic Advisors, 2009
Value of Applied Associate Degree
Wisconsin United States
Wages Shares
Wages
Shares
Dropouts $9.16 4.3% $10.01
8.7%
High School $13.78
29.9%
$13.29
28.4%
Some Coll., No Deg.
$12.87
21.4%
$13.44
19.9%
Associate Degrees
$17.40
13.2%
$16.96
10.3%
Applied $17.24
8.8% $16.82
4.6%
Liberal Arts $17.81
4.4% $17.08
5.7%
Four-year College $23.07
31.0%
$24.81
32.4%
Median Wages and Education Level, 2009
Center On Wisconsin Strategy, State of Working Wisconsin - 2010
The Tipping Point
One year of college level credits plus a credential is needed to produce rewards:
• Earnings gains that stick• Meet employer expectations for
skilled workers• Prepared for moving even higher
in postsecondary education
Washington State Board of Community and Technical Colleges
RISE Target Population
1.4 million
1.3 million
695 thousand
18-54 yr old and either less than 2- or 4-yr degree or Limited English Proficiency
Worked last year
Less than median wage
COWS (Center on Wisconsin Strategy), Sep. 2009
(Regional Industry Skills Education)
Goal: Increase the number of adults who earn postsecondary credentials related to occupations in high demand.
Strategy: Career Pathway and Bridge Programs
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Degreeor
Diploma
Career Pathway—The Basic Idea
?Low Skill
Skilled
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Industry With Jobs
High School or Less
Education
Credentials
For employers: • Larger pool of qualified workers• Better pipeline to fill skilled jobs
from within• Higher retention, employee
loyalty
For workers: • Predictable path to job
advancement and higher wages• More employer support; easier
access to education• More security
Bridge
Career Pathways Model
Questions about Adult Career Pathways?
Please contact:Linda Preysz, Wisconsin Department of Workforce
Development(608)[email protected]
Willa Panzer, Wisconsin Technical College System(608)[email protected]
RISEpartnership.org