Workforce Development In Ohio
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Transcript of Workforce Development In Ohio
Skills Gap
How big a challenge is recruiting non-managerial employees with the skills, training, and education your company needs?
Source: “Across the Great Divide”, Civic Enterprises Corporate Voices for Working Families, March 2011
Source: US Census Bureau, American Community Survey 2005-2009
Current WorkforceEducational Attainment
EDR 4 Ohio US
% Bachelor’s & Higher
20.1% 21.1% 27.5%
% Associate’s Degree & Higher
26.8% 34.9% 37.9%
% HS Diploma & Higher
83.4% 83.0% 84.6%
CHALLENGE: Ohio cannot compete for Economic Development projects based on the education level of its workforce
Bachelor’s Degrees and Higher
U. S. Bureau of the Census's Decennial Census, File SF-3, (2000 and earlier years) and the American Community Survey (2006).
OH EDR 4
CHALLENGE: Ohio cannot compete for Economic Development projects based on the education level of its workforce
Of Every 100 9th Graders in Ohio…
Source: NCHEMS Information Center for Higher Education Policymaking and Analysis. Student Pipeline - Transition andCompletion Rates from 9th Grade to College. www.higheredinfo.org/dbrowser/index.php?
submeasure=119&year=2006&level=nation&mode=data&state=0
9th Graders Graduate High School in 4
Years
Enroll in College In the Fall
Still Enrolled Sophomore
Year
Earn a College Degree
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
100
74
45
3122
CHALLENGE: It’s not getting any better.
It’s not getting better…
19.24% of kindergartners enter school needing “intense instruction”
ODE KRA-L Data Summary: July 2010
24% of 8th Graders met no college readiness benchmarks
ACT College and Career Readiness Report: 2011
23% of high school graduates met no college readiness benchmarks
ACT College and Career Readiness Report: 2011
39% of high school graduates require remediation in either math or English
Ohio Board of Regents: May 2010
Workforce Development Solutions
• Short-term – Document skill set of available workforce using ACT’s WorkReady System
• Near-term – Increase the educational attainment of the adult population with industry recognized credentials
• Long-term -- Increase funding and participation of pre-K education to provide the base for educational success
Corporate Strategies for Overcoming the Talent Shortage
Redefining selection criteria
Improving the pipeline
Partnerning with education to create curriculum
Appointing people without skills, but ability to learn
Additional training to existing staff
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Source: Manpower Group, Talent Shortage Survey, 2011
WorkReady System addresses the Talent Shortage
• Additional training to existing staff– WorkKeys/NCRC has translated key human resource processes into a common
language, facilitating communication and good decision making throughout the organization
• Appointing people without skills, but the ability to learn– measures essential workplace skills and is a reliable predictor of workplace success.
• Partnering with education to create curriculum– connects work skills, training, and testing for education and employers.
• Improving the pipeline– Because WorkKeys measures skills valued by employers, students can use their results
to get a better picture of their chances for success in the workforce and to improve areas where their skills are weak.
• Redefining selection criteria– Take the guesswork out of hiring by comparing potential employees’ WorkKeys
assessment scores with benchmarks based on occupational needs, rather than educational attainment
Ohio Jobs by Skill Level, 2018
Source: Ohio Department of Job and Family Services
Need for Industry Recognized Credentials
Work and Learning Must Coincide
• Over 80 percent of education leaders we surveyed identified financial pressures, such as needing to work, as a major challenge to students completing a post-secondary degree or credential at their institution.
• 42 percent of education leaders selected their students’ need to work as the single biggest obstacle to improving post-secondary completion rates at their institution
Industry Recognized Credentials
• Short-term training – allows adult students to get back to work quickly
• Portable – recognized by multiple employers in multiple locations
• Stackable – can earn college credit and lead to advanced degress
Building for the Future
“Access to high-quality early education and learning opportunities is integralto helping today’s children prepare for the highly competitive, fast-pacedglobal economy. ”
Early Childhood Education = High ROI
• Early childhood development programs that focus on at-risk families have shown annual rates of return ranging between 7 and 10% – far exceeding returns from typical economic development initiatives.
• A study of New Jersey’s Abbott Preschool Program found up to 50% less grade retention for first graders who attended at both ages three and four
• Graduates of the Chicago Child-Parent Centers had 35% less grade retention and 26% less special education placement than their third-grade peers
SOURCE: The Talent Challenge 2: Ensuring Kindergarten Readiness by 2020, Ohio Business Roundtable, December 2010
“If we are truly committed to developing world-class talent and putting Ohio on a path to economic prosperity and growth, we must invest where the research tells us we can have the biggest impact – the early years.”
SOURCE: The Talent Challenge 2: Ensuring Kindergarten Readiness by 2020, Ohio Business Roundtable, December 2010