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Unit 1 Skilled Trades and Apprenticeship

Unit 1 Skilled Trades and Apprenticeship. Residential Construction Technology 2201. UNIT 1 Overview.

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Unit 1 Skilled Trades and Apprenticeship

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  1. Unit 1 Skilled Trades and Apprenticeship Residential Construction Technology 2201

  2. UNIT 1 Overview • The purpose of this unit is to develop an understanding of the scope of the skilled trades, how to enter a trade through the apprenticeship program, and develop a sense of what it is like to work in selected trades

  3. Topic 1 Apprenticeship Program 1.1.1 Describe the apprenticeship program • how to become an apprentice. • distinguish between certification for provincially designated trades and Red Seal, or inter-provincial, trades. Click on the seal 

  4. Apprenticeship • Apprenticeship policy is the jurisdiction of the Provincial Department of Education, Industrial Training Section. • Their Apprenticeship and Certification Website is the primary reference for resources. Check out!!! http://www.ed.gov.nl.ca/app/index.html • The specifics of apprenticeship programs are the mandate of the Provincial Apprenticeship and Certification Board. • See the webpage at http://www.ed.gov.nl.ca/app/pacb.htmlfor details of the mandate and specific duties of the board. • The full policy manual is available in PDF format at http://www.ed.gov.nl.ca/app/publications/policymanual.pdf.

  5. The Interprovincial Standards Red Seal programs website (http://www.red-seal.ca/Site/trades/analist_e.html) will give you the full list of trades. • The site will also be useful for the next topic. • Points to emphasize • Describe what constitutes an apprenticeship • Review of some of the programs available in Canada and this province • Relationship between apprentice and journeyperson • Designated trades versus red seal trades • Certification process • Check out this website…it answers many questions • NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR Apprenticeship System

  6. Assignments PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING: • All assignments are to be submitted using Google Docs. • Any questions with this setup --- please see me.

  7. Assignment 1 Briefly explain the following: • Apprenticeship • The apprentice • How to become an apprentice • The journeyperson • Provincial designated occupations/ trades • Certification (examination) in a designated trade • Red Seal trade • Certification (examination) in Red Seal trade

  8. Assignment 1…cont’d • What is the duration of apprenticeship? • Who administers the apprenticeship program? • Who are the partners to the apprenticeship agreement? • What are the roles of each partner? • What is the course component? • What is the workplace component? • What is the purpose of Logbook (Record of Occupational Progress) • How do the pay rates for apprentices compare to that of journeypersons?

  9. 1.1.2 identify the Newfoundland and Labrador designated trades and the Red Seal Trades • List of Red Seal Trades • http://www.red-seal.ca • Designated Trades Information for NL http://www.ed.gov.nl.ca/app/trades.html • Ellis Chart listing of provincial trades • Ellis Chart • Skilled trades at http://www.apprenticetrades.ca • Select Newfoundland and Labrador to get a 30 page listing of analyses of the skilled trades in this province

  10. Assignment 2 • List the types of trades that might be present on a construction site. For example, if you were building a house. Be specific with their job responsibilities.

  11. 1.1.3 Identify the common core courses in the skilled trades programs in Atlantic Canada • “Plans of Training” for provincial Apprenticeship and Certification • Plans of training for the various trades can be found here: • http://www.ed.gov.nl.ca/app/plans.html • Examples include: • carpenter • residential electrical • sheet metal worker Your assignment is to complete the Plan of Training assignment found on the course website.

  12. 1.1.4 recognize the necessity of the content within the common core courses in theskilled trades programs • Writing skills can affect the success of a business/the success of a person working in that business • Must be able to convey ideas, thoughts, and to communicate with others • Being able to emphasize specific points in writing • Importance of syntax and spelling mistakes • Proofreading and proper revision of documents • A business letter and a memo have differing purposes: • memos inform • letters are used to convince/influence • applications of workplace correspondence in each of the skilled trades

  13. Resources • Writing Professional Business Letters and Memos • http://Owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/pw/#sub7 • Samples of Good and Bad business letters • www.careersonline.com.au/easyway/apply/gbex.html • What makes a bad business letter • www.jobbankusa.com/business_cover_letter_sample.html • Sample Letters • http://www2.jobtrak.com/help_manuals/jobmanual/cover.html • Importance of Writing in the Workplace • http://www.writingcommission.org/prod_downloads/writingcom/writing-ticket-to-work.pdf

  14. Customer Service • Quality service is the keystone to repeat customer business • Quality Service is key to a successful business • Quality Service is related to positive employee attitude • Quality Service is about the type of treatment given the customer • Good listening skills are imperative • Emphasize the importance of empathy • Clarify the difference between a want and a need • Understand the customers wants and needs • Positive and negative channels of anger

  15. Customer Service Assignment You are to complete the Customer Service Assignment, found on the course website.

  16. FYI • United States Small Business Administration – quality of service • http://www.sba.gov/managing/marketing/customer.html • Government Standards for Quality Service – Government of Ireland • http://www.taoiseach.gov.ie/index.asp?docID=800 • Microsoft Customer Service Education Modules – Microsoft standards • http://www.microsoft.com/smallbusiness/resources/toolkit/module.aspx?mid=93

  17. Relate the role of organized unions to the skilled tradesperson • Rational for the existence of labour unions in the workplace • Historical impact that unions had on labour wage, rights and benefits • Relate the role of unions to ensuring a safe and hazard free work site for the skilled tradesperson • Various worker protection associations such as: • Workers compensation • Employment insurance • Occupational health and safety

  18. Resources • The Birth of Canadian Organized Labour http://canadianeconomy.gc.ca/english/economy/1873Canadian_Labour_Union.html • Newfoundland Ministry of Labour – role of unions and labour http://www.hrle.gov.nl.ca/lra/ • Work Safe, role of unions and safety in the workplace http://www.worksafesask.ca/startup/contributors.html • Canada’s Unique Social History – history of unionism http://socialpolicy.ca/cush/ • Canadian Labour History – history of unionism http://www.civilization.ca/hist/labour/lab01e.html

  19. Explore the process by which a person can search for prospective employment • The need for skilled tradespersons in NL and other parts of Canada • Agencies responsible for helping locate prospective employment • The role of the resume in the application process • Interview skills and techniques • Standards of dress for interviews • Appropriate language used for interview responses

  20. Searching for a job www.jobsetc.ca • Seneca Career Resources http://ilearn.senecac.on.ca/careers/research/searching_for_employment.html

  21. Evaluate the need for quality assurance in the workplace with respect to codes and standards, quality of materials, and quality of workmanship. • Construction codes of NL and Canada • Quality and standards of raw material used on the jobsite • Occupational health and safety considerations for health risk to worker • Requirement of quality drawings and documents as a starting point for any job • ISO 9001 standardization • http://praxiom.com/iso-9001.htm

  22. Assignment 3 Answer any TWO of the following: • Research and define the terms caveat emptor & caveat venditor. What significance do these terms have in the skilled trades world? • Research the historical role of unions in Atlantic Canada. Using a timeline itemize major events in the progress of unionism. See PP for help. • Search the local papers/online for advertisements for skilled trades positionsand write an assessment on one. What skills are required, what is the pay, is it contract-based, etc. • Review & suggest the potential cost of poor quality workmanship in terms of future costs. i.e insurance claims, legal liabilities, future effects on business, safety, etc. Notes: • Your assignment must be submitted via Google Docs. • Use of graphics may aid with your answer to some questions.

  23. 1.1.5 identify the technical courses for TWO trades, and identify the purpose of each course. The purpose of this outcome is to develop a “big pic­ture” view of the selected trades. Examples include, but you’re not limited to: • Carpentry • Residential Electrician • Sheet Metal Worker Each trade has a Plan of Training which shows the full list of courses. Each plan of training has a section that lists the courses and another that gives the contents of each course. For each course, the purpose is usually written as course aims, usually not more that four state­ments. See the Plan of Training form on the class website.

  24. Ellis Chart • The Ellis Chart is a comparative chart of apprentice training programs across Canada produced by Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (HRSDC) in partnership with the Canadian Council of Directors of Apprenticeship (CCDA). It is the only document of its kind in Canada that allows an interprovincial overview of the 13 Canadian apprenticeship systems. It represents a key product that provides governments, industry and educational institutions with data on more than 300 designated trades, more specifically on training, certification, education/entrance requirements and prior learning assessment and accreditation process. To learn more about the Ellis Chart, please access the About the Ellis Chart section of this Web site. • http://www.ellischart.ca/h.4m.2@-eng.jsp • Red Seal Site: http://www.red-seal.ca/w.2lc.4m.2@-eng.jsp

  25. 1.1.6 identify and list the work experiences required for apprenticeship in the selected trades • The apprenticeship program has significant work experience requirements. • Information in the plans of training identifies these requirements for most, but not all, of the trades. • Most programs have a block of in-school time followed by a block of work experience, followed by an in-school block. • Depending on the apprenticeship program, the pattern is repeated over a period of 2 to 5 years. NOTE: • each skilled trade has selected skills that an apprentice should experience; and • these are elaborated as part of a training plan.

  26. 1.1.7 research and report job conditions and employment prospects for the selected trades • The purpose of this outcome is to enable students to develop a sense of what it is like to work in a particular trade. • Apprentice • Journeyperson

  27. Resources • Service Canada • http://www.jobsetc.ca/content_pieces.jsp?lang=en&category_id=410 • NOC Website • http://www23.hrdc-drhc.gc.ca/2001/e/generic/welcome.shtml • Youth Ventures • http://www.youthventuresnl.com/success.php • LMI Works • http://lmiworks.nl.ca • National occupational analysis • http://www.redseal.ca/Site/trades/analist_e.htm

  28. Assignment 4 • Plans of Training • http://www.ed.gov.nl.ca/app/plans.html • List three trades in a table as either Provincial or Interprovincial. For example: • Briefly describe “Plans of Training”. • Briefly describe “Private Plans of Training”. • Compare the courses needed to complete Carpentry and Residential Electrician. List those courses that are the same in both trades.

  29. 1.1.8 Maintain a work log (portfolio) for personal and professional assessment. • individual to complete tasks; • it is a standard method of documenting and signing off when skills are acquired; • a work log is the standard tool in the apprenticeship program; • it is used to document jobs done, time on task, and has to be signed off by a journeyperson in the respective skilled trade; and • the work log will be a standard tool that the student will use in an ongoing fashion to document their work.

  30. Work Log Book – Assignment 5 • Students will complete a log book for the Residential Construction Technology 2201 course getting the associated skills signed off by the instructor. • This log book will be submitted upon course completion for evaluation. • Please prepare your own log book for this course. How to create a work log • http://www.ehow.com/how_2105493_create-worklog.html • Department of Education Website - http://www.ed.gov.nl.ca/app/registration/logbook.html

  31. Topic 2: The Design Process 1.2.1 identify the steps in the design process and predict how the design process can be applied to a job site situation • needs identification; • defining the problem; • generating options; • selecting the best option; • developing the solution; • prototyping and testing; and • evaluation and redesign.

  32. Example • The fabrication labs themselves are laid out for the module implementation. • The need was identified for more real activity in a smaller space, which defined the problem as possibly limiting the hands-on activities for students. • One option that could have been generated is a larger lab, but given the restrictions of time and money the best option was to adapt the activities. • The modular instruction method is the developed solution, it was tested and continues to be tested in pilot schools, which will evaluate it and refine it over time.

  33. Assignment 6 • Identify in school some problem that could be addressed within a Skilled Trades course. • Apply the design process to the problem in an effort to develop a workable solution. • This process will involve using teams of 3. As a group you are to make a few notes on your idea to help be able to discuss it with the class. http://www.technologystudent.com/designpro/despro1.htm • .

  34. 1.2.2 demonstrate recognition of the importance of a team approach in skilled trades job experiences • This outcome identifies a key area of employability skills. • Working as a team is an integral part of the trades experience. • The student model for this will involve relying on a work-mate for assistance in completing the assigned task. • Skilled trades persons constantly rely on the assistance of a team mate, and few trades work in isolation. • Even those trades requiring only a single worker often will have an apprentice worker to aid in the task.

  35. 1.2.3 develop strategies for managing individual and team activities • This section is the precursor to the project management topic in Unit 3. • Identify ways they can monitor their work and manage the movement of materials and personnel within the fabrication lab. • A discussion of work plans, log books, scheduling, module timetables and time on task. • Stress the importance of working well to complete tasks on time, as there will be a set job time for each module. • Working to a deadline is another important area within employability skills.

  36. Project Management • Students, during the project management role-play, will assess the performance of other students as team members and as individuals throughout the course. • Team Work Essentials • http://www.time-management-guide.com/teambuilding.html • Overview of Project Management • http://managementhelp.org/plan_dec/project/project.htm • Team work rubric - http://www.teach-nology.com/web_tools/rubrics/teamwork • Team work in the classroom • http://www.ndt-ed.org/TeachingResources/ClassroomTips/Teamwork.htm

  37. Assignment 7 • Based on the resources on the previous slides: • complete a “best-practices” list concerning work plans, log books, scheduling, module timetables, and time on task. • As part of the project management role-play, students may present a list of possible ways to improve the efficiency of the environment.

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