1 / 43

Dr. Deborah George Wright, Ed.D. Vice President for Workforce Development

Extreme Career Pathways: A Roadmap to Success. Dr. Deborah George Wright, Ed.D. Vice President for Workforce Development Thomas Nelson Community College. Shawn Avery Vice President Peninsula Council for Workforce Development.

wren
Download Presentation

Dr. Deborah George Wright, Ed.D. Vice President for Workforce Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Extreme Career Pathways: A Roadmap to Success Dr. Deborah George Wright, Ed.D. Vice President for Workforce Development Thomas Nelson Community College Shawn Avery Vice President Peninsula Council for Workforce Development

  2. High paying careers impacted by changes in technology • Global competition requires high performing organizations • Businesses require a thinking, social and technically skilled workforce to stay in business Leadership class at Canon Workforce Center

  3. Businesses have flattened, lost training managers/OJT supervisors • Graduates need knowledge, work experience, soft skills, and analytical ability • Earn and learn postsecondary education essential for student and businesses success Student in Weatherization Specialist Program

  4. The average 20 year old will have five to six careers requiring postsecondary education • Businesses must continually retrain their workforce • Businesses and students requiring colleges to provide technology training anytime, anyway, anywhere TNCC Precision Welding Center

  5. New and accelerated youth and adult career pathways are needed for entry and continuous advancement in the changing STEM advanced technology and green production careers of today and tomorrow. An underemployed single mom & her unemployed son completed 330 hours of welding training at TNCC. Both were immediately hired by the Shipyard and are employed at very good wages wi.th full benefits

  6. New career pathways will be constructed like road systems to and throughout our major cities… …they will appear, expand and even change direction.

  7. A Career Pathway is only as good as the availability of quality jobs, the understanding of the skills needed and the capability and capacity of the regional education system to prepare and retrain the workforce needed

  8. The Peninsula Challenge • 5 advanced technology / advanced manufacturing firms announced expansions that will create 5,000 jobs • 15,000 skilled workers in precision manufacturing are slated to retire in the next five years

  9. The Peninsula Challenge • 35,000 residents seek work annually • 10,000 more military vets • 50,000+ lack HS credential

  10. The Peninsula Challenge • 80% of new hires are under-qualified • Lack one or more skills • Applied Math • Literacy • Technical Skills • Work Skills

  11. The Peninsula Challenge • Different levels of skills required. • Unknown math, literacy, or technical skill levels • Pathway needed for entry and advancement • Under-shooting=under-prepared worker, turnover. • Over-shooting =closed access, choked pipelines, wasted time/money, lost business, lost opportunity

  12. The Peninsula Career Pathways Strategy for Jobs of the Future 1. Identify competencies for the new jobs, demand and supply, and the skill gaps. 2. Develop pathways for entry and advancement. 3. Create a strategic plan to align secondary, postsecondary, and workforce training systems Fill skill gaps for target populations

  13. Peninsula Career Pathways Initiative Partnership: Peninsula Council for Workforce Development Thomas Nelson Community College 5 Colleges and Universities 14 Manufacturers 6 School Districts Funding: VCCS and Ford Foundation Project Technical Advisors: Center for Workforce Strategies Researcher: SOAR-Successful Options for Achieving Results

  14. Industry Sector: • Target: 20 top manufacturers 28,000 jobs • Participation Rate: 14 top manufacturers (70%) 25,062 jobs (89.5%)

  15. Data Gathering • Virginia - ONET – VOS Data: Demographic data • Survey I-Part I (On-Line) Job title/category, number each year, forecast • Interviews- (One on One) Company Executive • Survey I-Part II (On-Line) job competencies • Survey II – (On-Line) Projection of advanced and new occupations

  16. FINDINGS: Operations • Sector is strong and getting stronger • 8 will maintain operations at least the same level next five years • 6 predict expansions of ranging from 8% to 25% of their business

  17. FINDINGS: Business Challenges • Acquiring skilled workforce • Advancing skills of current workforce • Improving production processes

  18. FINDINGS: Primary Work Function • Plant operation and production • Engineering • Management • Welding • Maintenance and repair

  19. FINDINGS: Openings 3,000 positions per year require postsecondary • Fitters- 100-500 • Welders-100 to 500 • Electricians-50 to 500 • Pipefitters-50-750 • Production machinists-100-250 • Surface treatment technicians 100-250 • Engineers-20-50 • Operations managers 10-50

  20. FINDINGS: Major Skill Gaps • Job readiness • Problem solving/decision making • Technical skills • Teamwork • Math skills • Communication/listening/interpersonal • Automation/technology skills • Quality assurance • Supervisory skills

  21. FINDINGS: Hiring Difficulty • Skilled production workers • Product developers/designers • Quality control improvement supervisors • Engineers • Logistics

  22. FINDINGS: New Careers • Modeling and simulation technician • Nuclear energy technician • Non-destructive testing technician • Materials science technician • Green engineering technician • Logistics process technician

  23. FINDINGS: Skill Sets-Rosetta Stone • Foundation Skills-Computation (7 levels) • Foundation Skills-Communication (7 levels) • Foundation Skills-Science (3 levels) • Workplace Skills – (5 categories) • Technology Skills (5 categories) • Professional Skills (9 categories) • Technical Skills (18 categories)

  24. FINDINGS: Locating Workforce • Entry Level – Word of Mouth, Contract first, One Stop/VEC, Promote from within, TNCC Career Center, News, HS, University Career Center, others… • Technical- Promote from within, One Stop/ VEC, Word of Mouth, Internet, TNCC Career Center, Contract first, News, Search Firm, Employer Assoc, University Career Center, others …

  25. FINDINGS: Current Partnerships • Work with TNCC – 10/14 (71%) • NHREC – 7/14 (50%) • HSs – 5/14 (36%) • Employer Associations - 4/14 (29%) • WIB - 4/14 (29%) • ODU - 3/14 (21%)

  26. FINDINGS: Willingness to Partner • Will pay co-ops or internships 10/14 • Visit classrooms/meet with students 10/14 • Participate in joint pipelines/pathways 9/14 • Review national models/certifications 9/14 • Serve of curriculum committee, advisory board 9/14 • Participate in joint professional development 9/14 • Provide subject matter experts 8/14 • Mentor students/career cafes 7/14 • Establish apprenticeships 7/14 • Participate in career fairs 7/14 • Customize and pay for pre-hire training 5/14 • Pay for scholarships 1/14

  27. Participating Companies Advex Continental (Siemens) Alcoa Howmet Davis Boatworks Anheuser Busch Liebherr Mining Avid Medical NASA Langley Ball Metal Newport News Shipbuilding Canon Virginia Printpack (2 anonymous)

  28. The Mission of the Comprehensive Community College 20th Century--Postsecondary Mission – transfer, occupational technical, workforce, bridge (prepare well rounded individuals for continuation or specialization) 21st Century—Postsecondary Career Pathways (postsecondary entry and life long career pathway continuing education) *Earn and Learn (employed, coop, internships) *Stackable credentials, dual-articulated, built in industry standards *Adapt and change with need *Customizable

  29. virginiapeninsulacareerpathways.org

  30. Strategic Planning Retreat Purpose • To initiate Virginia Peninsula region-wide strategic visioning and planning for Comprehensive Career Pathways in Advanced and Precision Manufacturing

  31. Retreat Objectives 1. To develop Virginia Peninsula Career Pathways in Manufacturing Partnership Vision and Mission: DAY 1 2. To identify Virginia Peninsula Career Pathways in Manufacturing Supply and Demand Opportunities/Gaps: DAY 1 (SWOT Analysis) 3. To clarify Virginia Peninsula Career Pathways in Manufacturing Strategic Plan Outcomes: DAY 2

  32. Mission Statements • Meet the skilled workforce needs of advanced and precision manufacturing on the Virginia Peninsula through collaborative partnerships and an integrated seamless Career Pathways system

  33. Vision Statements • The Virginia Peninsula is a globally recognized hub for advanced and precision manufacturing that produces a population of people that is STEM prepared to advance in any direction and adapt to manufacturing industry needs today and tomorrow

  34. Core Values • Pathway not pipeline • Collaborative, cooperative and mutually beneficial • Creates more opportunities each step • Is integrated not siloed • Overlays pathways for commonalities • Multidisciplinary and multifaceted • Interconnected on and off ramps no wrong turn • Provides real work experience • Stackable, articulated credentials

  35. Inspirational Statement • We recognize that we are a unique region. Because of the diversity of our population, industries and academic institutions; because of our nationally recognized partnerships; and because our technology firms are among the most advanced throughout the world, we can do things no other region can do.

  36. Presentation & reports available atwww.pcfwd.org/initiatives_regional_pathways.asp

More Related