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Understanding the Key Components for Use

NCRC & WorkKeys. Understanding the Key Components for Use. Rachael Jungblut Executive Director MINCRC Advocates Grand Rapids Community College. Rachael Jungblut Exec. Director MINCRC Advocates rjungblu@grcc.edu 616-234-3623.

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Understanding the Key Components for Use

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  1. NCRC & WorkKeys Understanding the Key Components for Use Rachael Jungblut Executive Director MINCRC Advocates Grand Rapids Community College www.michigancrc.org

  2. Rachael Jungblut Exec. Director MINCRC Advocates rjungblu@grcc.edu 616-234-3623 www.michigancrc.org

  3. The National Career Readiness Certificate addresses these needs: Certifies the common workplace skills and trainability of students and job seekers Is a nationally-recognized, portable credential Is recognized by both education and business Provides a common measurement between individuals and specific jobs Has been adopted by over 20 states and growing http://www.act.org/certificate www.michigancrc.org

  4. No one questions the importance associated with employer adoption of the NCRC. • Recognize that the NCRC exists in a traditional supply and demand market. It exists in Michigan High Schools, and in MIWorks! • So the questions include: how do we help employers engage; how can the NCRC be used by employers; and why should employers want to be engaged—how does the NCRC fit to their priorities? www.michigancrc.org

  5. To answer questions of “why” and “how”, it is helpful to consider the postsecondary talent identification and development system (admissions system). www.michigancrc.org

  6. A strength for which higher education in the U.S. has been lauded and applauded is its diversity including colleges and universities that range in: • Size • Philosophy • Make-up of the student population • Range of offers • Areas of specialization • Funding sources, annual budgets, endowments Within this great diversification of offerings, all of the two- and four-year colleges/universities shared a common goal of admitting individuals to their respective institutions with the skills necessary to benefit from and contribute to the institution’s offerings: Individuals who are “college ready.” www.michigancrc.org

  7. How does the admissions model work? Assessment results are used in a compensatory model as one of several criteria in making the admission decision along with: • High school G.P.A. • Rank in class • Course taking pattern • Recommendation • Candidate essay Results also inform course placement decisions. www.michigancrc.org

  8. The colleges know from experience that ACT research and local studies (if conducted) document the predictability of student performance based on ACT results. The relationship between performance on the ACT assessment and performance in college courses is well documented. www.michigancrc.org

  9. What are the outcomes that result from the admissions model? • Individuals pay $45 to take an assessment. • Schools review and teach skills pertinent to performance on the ACT assessment. • Parents lobby schools to prepare their son/daughter with the skills necessary to take the ACT assessment. • Students seek ACT assessment preparation experiences. • Third party organizations offer test preparation opportunities. • Key publics are interested in regional/state performance on the ACT assessment as one indicator of school performance. • Realtors use ACT results by school district to position property for sale. • A set of common college readiness skills become the focus for a cross-section of stakeholders. www.michigancrc.org

  10. College Admissions Analogy: The colleges speak to thousands of high schools and millions of individuals via the ACT The NCRC provides the same opportunity to employers. www.michigancrc.org

  11. The NCRC Can have the same Impact? • Aggregate the Voice of the Employer • Endorse the NCRC and its use within the employer community. • Require the NCRC for hiring purposes. • Advocate for expanded use of the NCRC through documenting successful practices. www.michigancrc.org

  12. How does the college admissions model fit to the employer use model? • Employers aggregate their demand by requiring the NCRC from job applicants (for all or a number of their jobs). • Individuals acquire the NCRC through the services of the workforce or educational development systems or independently. • Employers use the NCRC as one of several criteria for hiring into their workforce (compensatory model). ACT research reports that individuals earning an NCRC are more likely to perform and/or learn in the workplace. Employer case studies support ACT’s findings as well. • Workforce development systems and schools focus their attention on preparing individuals with essential employability skills. www.michigancrc.org

  13. What does this mean for the corporate community? Potentially plenty! Corporations have objectives not dissimilar to those of colleges and universities. Within all of the corporate diversity, corporations—as with colleges and universities—seek to admit (hire) employees with the core essential skills necessary to benefit from and contribute to the work of the corporation. They seek to have employees “work ready” just as postsecondary institutions seek college ready individuals. The lesson corporate America can learn from higher education is the power of acting in common to address a common need—better job applicants. The problem in the past was not having an easily implemented common standard to which individuals could be held. That has changed. www.michigancrc.org

  14. Skill Areas of The Career Readiness Certificates Reading for Information Applied Mathematics Locating Information Three Certificate levels: Bronze – Minimum of Level 3 in all Skill Areas Qualified for 30% of Jobs Silver – Minimum of Level 4 Qualified for 65% of Jobs Gold – Minimum of Level 5 Qualified for 85% of Jobs www.michigancrc.org

  15. TM T H E S O L U T I O N www.michigancrc.org www.michigancrc.org

  16. WorkKeys is the measurement tool. • WorkKeys quantifies skills in the following categories: • Applied Mathematics • Applied Technology • Business Writing • Listening • Locating Information • Observation • Reading for Information • Teamwork • Writing www.michigancrc.org Slide 16

  17. Job Profile – identifies the skills and skill levels needed to be successful on the job.Assessments – shows the current skill levels of an individual.Training – helps individuals and employers correct skill gaps. www.michigancrc.org

  18. Qualified applicants • Foundational skills (NCRC) • Reading for Information, Applied Math, Locating Information • Occupational skills • Certificate; degree; license • Experience • Years of specific experience; years of related experience • Soft skills • Performance—behavioral concerns; Talent—personality indicators; Fit—job fit, interests and values • Other • Reference checks; validation of job performance, experiences, responsibility and contributions; drug screen; negative history search www.michigancrc.org

  19. Human Resource Policies, Employee Handbook and Link to Employee Performance, Metrics www.michigancrc.org

  20. Recommended use of the certificate: • Require the NCRC for all or a subset of jobs. • Do not specify level of certificate—use performance to inform hiring decision. • Use NCRC as one of several criteria for selection/hiring. www.michigancrc.org

  21. Require a Specific NCRC • Require the NCRC for all or a subset of jobs. • Require a Specific Level of NCRC for all or a subset of jobs. • Document your selection criteria with one of the following processes • Occupational Reference, using ONET & ACT Occupational Database, combined with your job description • ACT’s Estimator Product • Use NCRC as one of several criteria for selection/hiring. * For information on ACT’s job analysis tools Estimator http://www.act.org/workkeys/overview/prod.html#analysis www.michigancrc.org

  22. Require Specific Level Scores for Specific Testswww.act.org/workkeys/profiles/occuprof www.michigancrc.org

  23. Certificate Adoption and Use Model Significant benefit to employer and employer’s workforce performance with commensurate cost Full Deployment of WorkKeys System Focus on WorkKeys System Pre-Selection Using Certificate Levels and Assessment Results Major benefit to employer with modest costs Focus Shifting to WorkKeys System Training/Development Low cost to employer, no out-of-pocket expense. Significant benefit to community and substantial benefit to employer National Career Readiness Certificate Adoption Focus on Credential www.michigancrc.org

  24. Projected benefits for employers Employers have reported several benefits associated with their use of the WorkKeys system. These benefits are listed below: • A reduction in: training time due to a more targeted overtime approach; overtime; turnover; scrap expenditures. • Improved quality of new hires. • Increased productivity. • Cash flow improvements. • Improved efficiency of operational procedures. • Documentation to meet ODHA requirements. • Improved employee morale. • Accelerated training given new hires readiness to learn. www.michigancrc.org

  25. Projected benefits for employers • Better fit of employee to work. • Boost in quality of work. • Increased job satisfaction; skill levels; participation in further education. • Greater diversity in the employee pool. • Improved ROI. www.michigancrc.org

  26. Questions/Dialogue www.michigancrc.org

  27. National Career Readiness Certificate Partnerswww.michigancrc.org Rachael Jungblut, GRCC, 616-234-3623, rjungblu@grcc.edu Bill Guest, Metrics Reporting, 616-430-0828, bill.guest@metricsreporting.com ACT WorkKeys, www.act.org/workkeys Steve Anderson, 563.391.3742, steve.anderson@act.org KeyTrain, www.keytrain.com Brian Heerdt 616-234-3845 , Brian.Heerdt@michigancrc.org www.michigancrc.org

  28. Rachael Jungblut Exec. Director MINCRC Advocates rjungblu@grcc.edu 616-234-3623 www.michigancrc.org

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