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Building A Skilled Workforce

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Pennsylvania Unemployment Rate by Educational Attainment. Pennsylvania's Challenges ... NH. MD. NJ. MA. CT. DE. RI. Single diploma. Two-tiered diploma. Three ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building A Skilled Workforce


1
Building A Skilled Workforce Job Ready
Pennsylvania
2
Over the Last Two Years the Foundation for a More
Vibrant Economy Was Prepared
  • Three Corners of the Foundation
  • Property Tax Relief
  • Boosting Student Achievement
  • Economic Stimulus
  • Fourth Corner of the Foundation
  • Building a Skilled Workforce

2
3
The Knowledge Based Economy
  • Today, the knowledge required to run the
    economy, which is far more complex than in our
    past, is both deeper and broader than ever
    before. We need to ensure that education in the
    United States, formal or otherwise, is supplying
    skills adequate for the effective functioning of
    our economy.
  • ---Alan Greenspan, Chairman of the Board of
    Governors of the US Federal Reserve System, at
    the Greater Omaha Chamber of Commerce 2004 Annual
    Meeting, Omaha, 20 February 2004

3
4
Median Pennsylvania Income by Educational
Attainment (2004)
Educational Attainment Opportunity
Source U.S. Bureau of Census, Current Population
Survey (CPS), March Supplement
4
5
Pennsylvanias Challenges
  • Businesses often cant find skilled workforce to
    compete in the global, technologically driven
    economy
  • Low educational levels compared to other states
    and too few opportunities for adults to increase
    skills or participate in lifelong learning
  • Students not prepared for todays world of work
  • Fragmented workforce development system, lacking
    accountability

5
6
Unskilled jobs are disappearing and demand for
higher skills is rising
Pennsylvanias Challenges
Source U.S. Bureau of Census and Pennsylvania
Department of Labor and Industry, Center for
Workforce Information and Analysis (Pennsylvania
statewide)
6
7
  • 60 of job growth through the year 2012 will be
    in occupations that require postsecondary
    vocational training or higher

Pennsylvanias Challenges
  • Biological Technicians (37,170)
  • Registered Nurses (49,390)
  • Dental Hygienists (49,660)
  • Computer Support Specialists (39,900)
  • Massage Therapists (28,750)
  • Automotive Service Technicians and Mechanics
    (31,410)
  • Emergency Medical Technicians and Paramedics
    (24,280)


A sample of growing occupations that require
postsecondary education with estimated average
salary
Source PA Department of Labor Industry, Center
for Workforce Information Analysis
7
8
  • Our aging workforce means that new workers
  • must replace skilled retirees

Pennsylvanias Challenges
Millions of Pennsylvanians
Source U.S. Bureau of Census, Current Population
Survey, March Supplement and PA Department of
Labor Industry, Center for Workforce
Information Analysis
8
9
Businesses cannot find the skilled workers they
need
Pennsylvanias Challenges
  • 82 of businesses surveyed by the Business
    Calling Program since 2003 say they are having
    difficulty recruiting the skilled workforce they
    need
  • PA ranks 46th among states in percent of persons
    with a high school diploma or less

9
10
  • Too few PA workers have the education to keep up
    with rapid technological change

Pennsylvanias Challenges
Educational Attainment for the Pennsylvanian
Labor Force (2004)
Source U.S. Bureau of Census, Current Population
Survey (CPS), Basic
10
11
Less education means lower earnings
Pennsylvanias Challenges
  • 37 of all working Pennsylvania residents aged 25
    and up earn an hourly wage that would equate to
    annual earnings of less than 25,364 if they
    worked full-time year-round

Source Keystone Research Center Analysis of the
Current Population Survey
11
12
Wages are growing too slowly for too many
Pennsylvanians
Pennsylvanias Challenges
  • Adjusted for inflation hourly wages in PA
    declined by 0.3 in 2003 while national wages
    rose by 1.1

Source Keystone Research Center, Economic Policy
Institute analysis of Current Population Survey
data
12
13
Workers with less education are more likely to
become unemployed
Pennsylvanias Challenges
Pennsylvania Unemployment Rate by Educational
Attainment
Source U.S. Bureau of Census, Current Population
Survey, Basic
13
14
Building a Skilled WorkforceKeeping
Pennsylvania Competitive, Creating Opportunity
14
15
Building a Skilled Workforce
  • Four Critical Strategies for Keeping Pennsylvania
    Competitive and Creating Opportunity
  • Strengthen Pennsylvanias industries Create
    industry-led training strategies
  • Increase opportunities for Pennsylvanias
    residents
  • Prepare youth for the careers of tomorrow
  • Implement rigorous accountability standards

15
16
The Strategy is Long Overdue
  • In 1997 Representative Flick called upon the
    House Pennsylvanias workforce system should
    be guided by the following principles be driven
    by the private sector be based on performance
    focus on high-skills/high-wage jobs support a
    stronger economy be universally accessible be
    regionally coordinated be locally implemented
    be a vehicle for lifelong learning and be
    competitively bid.
  • House Subcommittee on Workforce Development
    Report (October 1, 1997)

16
17
  • Strengthen Pennsylvanias Industries
  • Create Industry-Led Training Strategies

17
18
  • Pennsylvanias Workforce System Must Be
    Industry-Led

Industry-Led
Nationally Award Winning Cluster Analysis
Source PA Department of Labor Industry, Center
for Workforce Information Analysis,
Pennsylvanias Targeted Industry Clusters
18
19
Use Labor Market Information to develop
High Priority Occupations
Industry-Led
  • Analysis of clusters identifies gaps in skills
    and points to career opportunities
  • Industry Partnerships deepen learning about how
    traditional careers have changed
  • Experts reveal new and/or redefined occupations
    created in technologically transformed industries
  • Educators need this information to revise,
    update, create curriculum

19
20

Grow and Support Multi-Employer Collaborations
Industry-Led
  • A 5 million initiative to develop Industry
    Partnerships
  • Organize clusters of businesses that share
    similar workforce challenges, markets and
    suppliers
  • Create economies of scale for job training and
    education
  • Identify key occupations
  • Promote innovation
  • Working together, business can identify worker
    skill gaps, address training needs, and develop
    regional strategies to build stronger economies

20
21
Partnering with Employers HelpsClose Workforce
Gaps
Industry-Led
Most Pennsylvanians are employed by small and
medium-sized firms that cannot afford to update
the skills of their workforce on their own
Total Employees by Size of Firm
21
22
National Recognition for Pennsylvanias
Industry-Led Strategies
Industry-Led
  • This initiative is part of our commitment to
    help American workers obtain good jobs at
  • good wages with solid career paths in order to
    leave no worker behind.
  • Emily Stover DeRocco, USDOL Deputy Secretary for
    ETA
  • Selected as one of two states for President
    Bushs Demand Driven Incubator Project
  • Selected as only state to participate in National
    Foundations intermediaries project

22
23
Industry-Led Initiatives Also Create Opportunity
for Pennsylvanians
Industry-Led
  • Help businesses meet their needs for high skilled
    workforce
  • Help people already working get better jobs and
    advance their careers
  • Create career ladders
  • Target resources to High Priority Occupations
    jobs that are in high demand and pay higher wages

23
24
  • Increase Opportunities
  • for Pennsylvanias Residents

24
25

Target Investments to Growing Occupations Paying
Good Wages and Benefits
Opportunities
  • Redirect existing workforce development funds to
    High Priority Occupations, making better use of
    600 million
  • Provide more training opportunities for people
    already working
  • Make education more affordable for working and
    unemployed adults
  • Invest in Community Colleges
  • Accelerate degree attainment
  • Develop assessments for prior learning

25
26
Sample High Priority Occupations
Opportunities
Source PA Department of Labor Industry, Center
for Workforce Information Analysis, Long-Term
Occupational Employment Projections
26
27
Industry-led Initiatives Keep Businesses
Competitive and Create Opportunity
Opportunities
  • Address Pennsylvanias Critical Health Career
    Needs
  • A 40 million PHEAA-funded initiative supporting
    PA Center
  • for Health Careers Nurse Education Capacity
  • Recommendations
  • Nurse Educator Fellowships
  • Clinical Education Expansion Programs
  • Attraction and Retention Projects

27
28
Improve the Skills of the Current Workforce
Opportunities
  • New investment in a 15 million training fund for
    people
  • already working
  • Train workers for occupations needed by employers
    in targeted industry clusters
  • Help workers move up career ladder
  • Invest in innovative strategies
  • Require collaboration across programs and
    departments

28
29
Investing in Training for Existing Workforce is
Good for Workers, Good for Businesses, and Good
for PA
Opportunities
  • Improve Opportunities for Child Care and
  • Direct Care Workers
  • Quality training to workers
  • Career ladders and lattices
  • Improves recruitment and retention for employers
  • Improves quality of life for Pennsylvanians

29
30
Generate New Advanced Technology Skills in
Workers to Promote PAs Competitive Edge
Opportunities
  • Invest 3 million in Advanced Technology
    Knowledge Workers
  • Recruit top faculty researchers to create new
    jobs, businesses
  • and industries in advanced technology fields
  • Starter Kits are a new 3 million program
    designed to recruit top faculty researchers
  • Discretionary up-front funds for researchers to
    build out labs and hire staff, acquire
    equipment, and leverage their research
  • 1 to 1 university match required

30
31
Make Getting More Education and a Degree More
Affordable for Adults
Opportunities
  • Make Education and Training More Affordable For
    Adults
  • Only 3 of Pennsylvanias adult working
    population are enrolled in post-secondary
    education, compared to 6 in the nations
    benchmark states
  • Making higher education more affordable for
    working adults is crucial for our businesses and
    residents to compete in the global economy

31
32
Make Getting More Education and a Degree More
Affordable for Adults
Opportunities
  • Provide Financial Aid for Working Adults
  • Invest 10 Million from PHEAA in Opportunities
    for Less
  • than Full-time Students
  • Provide grants for part-time students
  • Provide aid for certificate programs less than
    two years in duration
  • Provide loans to working adults for costs
    associated with room and board, child care

32
33
Make Getting More Education and a Degree More
Affordable for Adults
Opportunities
  • Nearly half of all adult students are enrolled in
    Community
  • Colleges
  • Invest 22.8 million in Community Colleges to
    keep up with
  • increased enrollment
  • More predictable operating and capital funding
  • Incentives to develop and offer courses in high
    priority occupations
  • Hold Community Colleges accountable

33
34
Make Getting More Education and a Degree More
Affordable for Adults
Opportunities
  • Accelerate Degree Attainment
  • Core-to-Core Articulation
  • Require colleges to accept all credits from one
    community college to another and from community
    colleges to 4-year colleges and universities
  • Accelerate degree attainment by making credits
    transferable

34
35
Make Getting More Education and a Degree More
Affordable for Adults
Opportunities
  • Accelerate Degree Attainment
  • Prior Learning Assessments
  • Develop a credit course or a non-credit
    instructional program that assists students in
    evaluating and awards credit for knowledge and
    skills gained from non-traditional education and
    work experience
  • Accelerate degree attainment through prior
    learning assessment

35
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  • Prepare Youth for the Careers
  • of Tomorrow

36
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Prepare Youth for the Careers of Tomorrow
Tomorrows Workforce
  • Pennsylvanias Challenges Mirror Those of the
  • Nation
  • More than half of all high school students cannot
    meet our math standards
  • One in four of our high school students cannot
    meet PA reading standards
  • More than half of our students graduate from high
    school unprepared to do college-level work

37
38
Higher standards are needed to prepare our
students for todays economy
Tomorrows Workforce
  • Pennsylvania is 1 of 8 States Without
  • High School Course Requirements

ME
VT
NH
NY
MI
MA
CT
PA
RI
OH
NJ
IN
MD
DE
WV
VA
KY
No course requirements
TN
NC
AR
SC
Single diploma
Two-tiered diploma
FL
Three-tiered diploma
Four-tiered diploma
AK
HI
38
39
High School Reform is essential to better prepare
tomorrows workforce
Tomorrows Workforce
  • PA Will Meet the National Goals for High School
    Reform
  • Pennsylvania students attend high school for 720
    days from the beginning of 9th grade to the end
    of 12th grade
  • Project 720 will transform Pennsylvanias high
    schools through
  • four strategies
  • All students will take challenging courses in
    reading, writing, science math to prepare them
    for college and the workforce
  • Schools will make learning more personalized so
    that every student has the opportunity for
    success
  • Students will receive high-quality guidance
    counseling and career advising
  • Students will have more options to go from high
    school to college or high-skill careers and
    will get an early start in
  • making the transition

39
40
High Schools for the Future will ensure our youth
have earnings opportunities
Tomorrows Workforce
  • Building High Schools for the Future
  • Create statewide models of successful high
    schools and implement effective strategies
    statewide
  • Invest 4.7 million to double the number of
    Project 720 high schools from 41 to 80
  • Pay for tuition and book charges so at-risk
    students who are ready can gain college credit
    while completing their high school diploma
  • Invest 5 million in college credit for high
    school students (allowing for dual enrollment)

40
41
Improving Vo-techs is essential
Tomorrows Workforce
  • Significantly Improve PAs Career Technical
  • Education System
  • Much improvement is needed if CTE is to play its
    rightful role as an important contributor to the
  • economic strength of the state and the economic
    advancement of its residents.
  • JFF Report on Pennsylvanias Career and
    Technical Education System (February 2005)
  • Pennsylvania will over the next five years
  • Hold CTE students to high academic standards
    80 do not currently meet proficiency levels
  • Target tutoring to students who need help
  • Move 80 of all training to industry-approved
    standards over next five years
  • Upgrade CTE equipment
  • Improve data, tracking and staff development to
    ensure that CTE programs achieve higher goals

41
42
  • Implement Rigorous
  • Accountability Standards

42
43
Implement Rigorous Accountability Standards
Accountability
  • Implemented Performance Management Plan across
    all workforce programs on July 1, 2004
  • Provide incentives for High Performance Local
    Workforce Investment Boards
  • Insist on High Performance CareerLinks
  • Align the 22 fragmented workforce development
    funding streams

43
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Performance Management Plan
Tomorrows Workforce
  • Implemented July 1, 2004
  • Workforce and economic indicators demonstrating
    how Pennsylvania compares to other states
  • Common quantitative measures for all programs
  • Strategic measures that determine whether the
    program met overall Commonwealth goals
  • Publish Annual Report

44
45

High Performance Local Workforce Investment
Boards
Tomorrows Workforce
  • Set new standards based on industry needs, high
    priority occupations
  • Demand high performance
  • 22 million in incentives
  • Provide technical assistance
  • Require corrective action
  • Institute interventions

45
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Clear expectations will help bring local training
in line with employer needs
Tomorrows Workforce
  • High Performance WIB Milestones
  • Understand the regional labor market and survey
    the needs of regional employers
  • Organize Industry Partnerships in targeted
    industries
  • Identify high priority occupations that match up
    with regional demand
  • Improve CareerLinks performance by linking
    training to needs of Industry Partnerships
  • Improve fiscal performance

46
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Demand High Performing CareerLinks
Tomorrows Workforce
  • Determine location by demand for services
  • Deliver seamless services
  • Staff development for certified career planners
  • New evaluation mechanism
  • Measure outcomes for all customers

47
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Outcomes
Tomorrows Workforce
  • Better and deeper understanding of high growth
    occupations
  • More effective career education
  • New educational and earning opportunities for
    residents
  • Better outcomes through improved performance
  • More highly skilled workforce in key sectors
  • Stronger, more innovative, highly competitive
    companies

48
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