Basic Skills and Workforce Education: Better Together - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 46
About This Presentation
Title:

Basic Skills and Workforce Education: Better Together

Description:

Washington state and the 'tipping point' ... Washington State Projections ... I-BEST to take into account extra costs of two instructors, coordinating ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:55
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 47
Provided by: jst110
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Basic Skills and Workforce Education: Better Together


1
Basic Skills and Workforce Education Better
Together
  • presentation for
  • Minnesota Adult Education Transitions Conference
  • Julie Strawn
  • Center for Law and Social Policy
  • jstrawn_at_clasp.org
  • October 30, 2008

2
Your work is part of a national movement
  • At least 11 states have initiatives to improve
    effectiveness of dev. ed. and/or adult ed./ELL
    services (CO, CT, KY, IL, IN, MA, MD, MI, NJ, OR,
    WA)
  • At least 7 states (AR, KY, MA, OH, OR, WA, WI)
    have career pathway efforts
  • Half a dozen states have workforce bridge
    initiatives (IL, IN, MN, KY, OR, WA)
  • Many states have region/sector initiatives that
    include career pathways

3
The context an aging, more diverse, less skilled
workforce
  • Between 2004 and 2014, 24 of the 30
    fastest-growing jobs are expected to be filled by
    people with postsecondary education or training
    (either a certificate or degree). Many are
    middle-skilled jobs.
  • Yet nearly half of the U.S. workforce has only a
    high school education or less.
  • About two-thirds of our 2020 workforce is already
    beyond the reach of our elementary and secondary
    schools.
  • Nationally the current potential pool of skilled
    workers among prime-age adults is equal to the
    next 17 years of high school classes.

4
The context adult education at a crossroads
  • Current system was created 40 years ago
  • How well does it meet the needs of our students
    and our communities now?
  • Time for a reality check
  • who do we serve?
  • where do they want to go?
  • whats the best way to help them get there?
  • how long will they stay with us?

5
Students goals are economic, postsecondary
credentials key for reaching them
  • 2001 survey of why people took GED, 30 said
    employment, 66 said further education. WA
    state86 of adult ed students have employment
    goals.
  • For low skilled adults, thats where largest
    economic payoffs are. 1 year of college 10
    increase in earnings (as true for GED grads. as
    for h.s. grads)
  • Getting a GED alone does increase earnings but by
    less than a high school diploma. (Only pays off
    significantly for dropouts with lowest skills and
    for immigrants.)
  • Vocational certificates and degrees pay off more
    than academic ones at the Associate level and
    below
  • Up until now, assumption by programs and by adult
    ed. students has been that GED is the best route
    to good jobs and to postsecondary education

6
(No Transcript)
7
(No Transcript)
8
Too often, education ? economic opportunity for
low income adults
  • Why not? Services not aligned with each other or
    with labor market needs
  • Adult basic ed./ELL disconnect with job training
    and other postsecondary ed.
  • Developmental education disconnect with college
    occupational programs
  • Non-credit workforce education disconnect with
    for-credit certificate and degree prgms.
  • Workforce ed. not connected closely enough to
    employer workforce needs

9
For lower skilled adults the basic skills
disconnect looms largest
  • Adult ed. focused on GED but majority do not earn
    one, and few GED grads. ever complete postsec.
    credentials.
  • Most adult ed. students stay for 30 to 80 hours
    of instruction. (100-1501 grade level)
  • Only 12 completed gt 1 year of college in first
    decade after earning GED, 3 earn at least AA
    degree.
  • Bottom line Over several decades, of 100 adult
    ed. students, about 8 go on to postsec. and 2 get
    a BA. Very few English Language Learners
    transition.

10
Developmental education has similar problems
  • Nationally a majority of community college
    students need help with basic skills
  • 61 of first-time students in community colleges
    enrolled in at least one remedial course in the 8
    years after high school.
  • Students in dev. reading half as likely to
    complete cert./degree within 8 years after high
    school, vs. those not needing dev. ed. (30 vs.
    69).
  • Paradox students who complete dev. ed. are more
    likely to succeed than students with similar
    skills who do not take dev. ed. Similar story
    for adult education students.

11
Why arent outcomes better?
  • Basic skills content is a poor match for many
    students interests and goals, which typically
    are focused on entering and advancing in careers
  • One size fits few rigid sequence of basic
    skills coursework means it takes far too long to
    move into workforce education
  • Overburdened lives of low skilled, low income
    students, e.g. juggling work, college, parenting.
    Personal/family challenges, lack of confidence.

12
If expand goals beyond GED, what should adult ed.
programs focus on?
  • Create more options in adult ed/ELL that reflect
    students workforce goals and offer faster, more
    targeted ways to get there, even without a GED
  • Think about low skilled/limited English
    population in your regionwho are they? what
    kinds of postsecondary and job opportunities make
    the most sense for them?
  • Build coalition of the willing in your
    regionWIBs, CBOs, comm./tech. colleges. Focus on
    career/tech partners, not just academic ones
  • Be careful not to close one gap only to leave
    students falling through another one

13
Washington state and the tipping point
  • WA study found that the tipping point for a
    substantial earnings increase from community
    college is at least one year of vocational
    credits plus a credential. These results are
    consistent with national research.
  • 2,700 and 1,700 more per year (respectively)
    for workforce students entering with high school
    or GED
  • Even larger increases for lower skilled students
    and those with limited English ESL students earn
    7,000 more per year and ABE students 8,500 more
    per year
  • The tipping point represents the same mid-level
    skills and credentials that WA employers find in
    short supply

14
Washington State Projections
15
WA Community College Adult Basic Skills Education
Outcomes (Prince and Jenkins, 2005)
Source Prince Jenkins (forthcoming).
16
Addressing wage and skills gaps WAs story
  • Getting more adults to the tipping point
    becomes a key state goal, backed up by
  • Fundamental change in content and goals of adult
    ed. for upper levels of ABE/ESL Integrated Basic
    Education and Skills Training (I-BEST).
  • New state need-based aid program aimed at helping
    low income adults Opportunity Grants to student
    plus 1,500 to college to support success.
  • Creation of performance bonuses to colleges for
    helping students to reach momentum points
    Student Achievement Initiative.

17
Tracking outcomes across services
18
What Are Career Pathways? (aka Stackable
Credentials, Programs of Study, etc.)
  • Linked education and training services that
    enable students, often while they are working,
    to advance over time to successively higher
    levels of education and employment in a given
    industry or occupational sector. Each step on a
    career pathway is designed explicitly to prepare
    students to progress to the next level of
    employment and education. (Oregon)

19
What Are Career Pathways?
  • Ideally CPs are not a separate program but a
    framework for integrating systems and services
    and for connecting education and training to jobs
    of importance to local economies. Aimed at
    plugging leaks in the pipeline of skilled
    workers
  • Key is to provide incentives and tools for
    programs to work together jointly to achieve
    success

20
(No Transcript)
21
HEALTH CARE CAREER PATHWAY
Patient Care
Medical Administration
Allied Health
22
What Are Workforce Bridge Programs?
  • Occupational or workforce bridge programs
    typically cover soft skills, pre-college
    academic skills, and specific job skills, ideally
    one that is part of a career pathway.
  • Workforce bridges tailor and contextualize the
    adult ed/ELL content to general workplace needs
    and to the knowledge and skills needed in a
    specific occupation.
  • E.g. bridge programs in manufacturing cover
    blueprint reading, statistical process control.
    Those in health care cover intro. to human
    biology, vocab. and math for health careers.

23
What Are Workforce Bridge Programs?
  • Often use co-instruction involving adult ed/ELL,
    dev. ed., career/tech. faculty, academic faculty
  • Involve rewriting or creating curricula, offering
    staff/faculty release time to do this and
    extensive professional development. Ideally
    technical job content is integrated with adult
    ed/ELL content..
  • Often involve dual enrollment in adult ed./dev.
    ed./career and technical courses. Critical for
    qualifying bridge for college FTE, student aid
    which funds team teaching and comprehensive
    services.

24
Chicago, IL Carreras En Salud
  • Carreras en Salud helps limited
    English-proficient individuals advance to LPN
    positions. Latinos 26 of pop. in Chicago, but
    less than 2 of RNs and LPNs.
  • Partners include 11 major employers, 2 CBOs
    (Instituto del Latino Progreso, Ass. House of
    Chicago), community colleges (Wright College and
    affiliated Humboldt Park Voc. Ed. Center), local
    WIB, National Council of La Raza.
  • Offers students seven levels at which they can
    enroll, each level 16 weeks long, beginning with
    ELL bridge
  • Since early 2005, over 700 students enrolled, 89
    retention in prgm., 84 advance to next level. 85
    bilingual mostly Latina students have attained
    LPN. Graduates earning on average 40,000 per
    year.

25
LPN Wright College
RN schools
12 months
36
GED, Placement test
BIO 226, Math 118 ENG 101, PSY 201
16 weeks
31
16 weeks
Pre LPN B IDPL
ESL level 10-12 Pre LPN-A or CNA
24
PCT
EKG, Phlebotomy
Pre LPN A IDPL
16 weeks
ESL level 8-10, CNA
CNA / GED HPVEC
24
16
40
VESL CNA context IDPL
ESL level 6th
16 weeks
ESL Health Context IDPL/HPVEC
Prepared by Dr. Ricardo A. Estrada, Project
Coordinator, Carreras En Salud, A Chicago
Healthcare Bridge Partnership
16 weeks
26
Oregon VESL Welding Pathway
27
Washington States I-BEST Program
  • WA state goal Increase number of adult ed/ELL
    students who reach tipping point
  • State offered colleges 1.75 FTE to expand I-BEST
    to take into account extra costs of two
    instructors, coordinating instructions,
    additional student support
  • To do this have to rethink content/goals of adult
    ed/ELLnot GED, not entering dev. ed, but rather
    skills needed for job and next education step in
    pathway.
  • All I-BEST programs must be part of 1-year
    certif. program or other occup. prgm. with proven
    ability to place grads. in higher wage jobs.
    Std. was wages gt 12 an hour (gt than 14 an hour
    in Seattle).

28
Washington States I-BEST Program
  • I-BEST pairs ABE/ELL instructors with prof./tech
    instructors in the classroom to provide
    integrated basic skills and job training.
  • Goal is to earn a for-credit occupational
    certificate AND raise basic skills/English to
    level needed to take next career and educational
    step.
  • Instructors co-teach 50 of the time, other half
    of the time teach the same students
    contextualized basic skills and occupational
    skills separately. Pilot programs ranged from 1-3
    quarters.
  • In pilots I-BEST students earned 5 times more
    college credits and were 15 times more likely to
    complete training than traditional ELL students.

29
Washington States I-BEST Program
  • Now have 1600 students in I-BEST
  • 70 programs at 32 of 34 colleges
  • More than half of the programs focus on Health
    Care or Office Support/ Technology
  • Other career pathways range from Early Childhood
    Education to the Trades

30
Increasing Student Achievement for Basic Skills
Students- continued
  • Students who combine college content with
    basic skills through I-BEST and other ways
    increase their basic skills at higher rates than
    students enrolled exclusively in basic skills.
    (Source Israel Mendoza, WA State Board Comm. and
    Tech. Colleges)

30
31
Increasing Student Achievement for Basic Skills
Students - continued
  • Much higher percentages of I-BEST students
    earn their first 15 college credits than do basic
    skills students who attempt college coursework in
    other ways (53 vs. 23 for ELL and 61 vs. 32
    for ABE/GED students). (Source Israel Mendoza,
    WA State Board Comm. and Tech. Colleges)

31
32
I-BEST Brings In New Resources
  • Kathy Cooper, WA Adult Ed. I-BEST is the center
    of the largest historic increase in the community
    and technical college operating budget.
  • 500 FTEs I-BEST -7,350,000
  • 1250 FTEs ABE -11,438,000
  • 600 FTEs High Demand -5,280,000
  • Opportunity Grants -15,000,000
  • Additional funding for general enrollment.

33
2007 KY Adult Ed./Dev. Ed Bridges into Career
Pathways
  • Builds on statewide Career Pathways which began
    in 2003 and focuses on the basic skills piece of
    the pathway
  • Local teams submit proposals these teams must
    include at least 1 instructor each from dev. ed,
    adult ed., general ed., and career/tech. ed.
  • Grants fund curricular redesign and integration
    of basic skills, workforce dev., and academic
    transfer coursework.
  • E.g. contextualization, chunking, flexible
    delivery, on-line learning, workplace learning.

34
2007 KY Adult Ed./Dev. Ed Bridges into Career
Pathways
  • Funding covers professional dev., TA, and faculty
    stipends
  • All aimed at creating integrated remediation
    customized to specific occupational career
    pathway.
  • 2006 grants focused on dev. ed. (6 pilots) for
    2007 grants, local teams had to also include
    adult ed./ELL (7 pilots).
  • Pilots mix of dev. ed., adult ed, and ELL.
    Sectors include construction, health care,
    manuf., and HVAC.

35
Madisonville, KY Dev. Ed/Workforce Ed. pilot
  • Waived dev reading requirement for 2 cohorts of
    Anatomy and Physiology students who loved science
    but not reading
  • Created integrated curricula of 3 courses--dev.
    reading (030), a college success course (GE 101)
    and Anat./Phys.
  • Overall focus contextualize, create a learning
    community, use active learning, and team teach
  • Used state grant for release time for instructors
    to create curricula in Spring 2007 and to
    implement it in Fall 2007
  • Meets T-TH from 8-1215 for class and F from
    9-11, study groups F from 8-9.
  • One semesters results so farthe pilot cohort
    outscored the regular Anat. Phys. class on all
    three exams

36
Other examples, KY Dev. Ed/Adult Ed. pilots
  • Lexington, KY (Bluegrass College)
  • 16 week Learning Community for Construction
    Technology students in first semester.
    Curriculum integrates construction tech. content
    with GED/Workplace Skills curriculum delivered by
    ABE personnel. 
  • Maysville, KY (Licking Valley Campus)
  • Modeled after WAs I-BEST model, KCTCS and Adult
    Basic Education co-developed and implemented
  • Blends dev. math and English lang. (MT055,
    ENC090, ENC091), workplace skills, and Practical
    Nurse (PN) prgm.
  • Other pilots deliver integrated basic skills and
    workforce ed. at worksites, in public housing

37
Key tasks for bridge programs
  • Align adult ed/ELL and college remediation
    content with postsecondary content
  • Crosswalk assessments (eg TABE with COMPASS,
    ACCUPLACER) and curricula, contextualize, and
    integrate if possible, make the end goal of adult
    ed/ELL the skills needed for next job or next
    level of education in career pathway.
  • Shorten the timeline for enrolling in workforce
    ed., boost intensity of instruction
  • Dual enrollment/dual credit, integrated programs,
    accelerated programs. Typically 15-20 hours.

38
Key tasks for workforce bridge programs
  • Build partnerships with WIBs, CBOs, colleges, and
    others.
  • Have close, ongoing, personal connections with
    employersbut be selective about partners.
  • Input into program design and content
  • Internships, workplace learning
  • Company employees as faculty
  • Support success
  • Proactive advising linked to academic/tech.
    faculty, career exploration, college success
    courses, academic advising, financial aid, child
    care, transportation, peer support.

39
Oregon Pathways for Adult Basic Skills
  • Initiate adult ed. systems change that is
    sustainable with formal links to postsec. ed. and
    to One-Stop Centers vision is for this to become
    the way the whole system operates
  • Six Development Sites currentlycurriculum and
    module development, pilot testing, curriculum and
    module revision, more sites will be added
  • Integrate occupational information that is
    focused on OR high-demand occupations
  • Health Services (e.g., medical assisting, medical
    records)
  • Industrial Engineering Systems (e.g., welding,
    construction)
  • Business Management (e.g., marketing/sales)

40
AR Fast Track bridge into health science
  • SEARKs Fast Track targets lower skilled students
    (9th grade and below) interested in one or
    two-year health science certificate and degree
    programs. (Also have WAGE adult ed. bridge for
    lowest level students.)
  • Intended to help students become college-ready in
    one semester (This typically takes 2 or more
    semesters)
  • Curriculum is reading, writing, and math
    contextualized to health science careers, taught
    jointly by dev. ed. and health science faculty in
    a learning community format
  • Students in class Mon.-Thur. from 8 a.m. to 12
    p.m. times that were convenient for students
    work schedules.
  • Completion rate for the first two cohorts of
    students has been over 80 percent.

41
IL and IN Shifting Gears pilots
  • ILs bridge pilots 3 integrate dev. ed. with
    occup. prgrms, 5 integrate adult ed./ELL to
    occup. prgrms.
  • Black Hawk College, with partner Quad Cities
    Logistic Roundtable (employer assoc.) providing
    workplace-based skills training, GED prep. and
    contextualized ELL leading to Warehousing and
    Distrib. Certificate.
  • Lewis and Clark College integrates basic skills
    and manufacturing content, uses team teaching,
    and a counselor. Blended format of on-line and
    in-class learning, required internships, leads to
    Entry level Water and Wastewater Operations
    Certificate Manufacturing Technician Certificate
    program

42
IL and IN Shifting Gears pilots
  • INs Embedded Skills Pilots
  • Contextualized remediation for specific
    occupational programs where feasible, combining
    this instruction with part-time paid internships
    work in field of study.
  • Five pilots underway in Evansville, Muncie, South
    Bend, and Columbus in automotive, early
    education, industrial technology, and
    manufacturing occupations.
  • Evansvilles Early Childhood Education program
    integrates instruction in developmental reading
    and writing within a four-course sequence leading
    to the Child Development Associate credential.

43
WI Shifting Gears Bridge Programs
  • Chippewa Valley 16 week welding certificate,
    team teaching, transferable to tech. diploma
  • Lakeshore 3 course manuf. bridge, focuses on
    shared math and reading competencies for
    Industrial Maintenance, Machine Tool Operation,
    and Welding.
  • Northcentral Integrate ELL instruction into
    nursing assistant curriculum, while maintaining
    industry skill standards and state licensing
    requirements.

44
WI Shifting Gears Bridge Programs
  • Moraine Park, Gateway Milwaukee
  • Career ladder in Industrial Maintenance with 3-5
    embedded certificates
  • Welding career pathway with integrated ABE/ELL
    and career/tech. team teaching.
  • Northeast Two certificate programs, General
    Manufacturing and Welding, with integrated,
    contextualized curriculum.

45
Transition models for out of school youth
  • Integrated adult education, dev. ed. and/or job
    training for out of school youth
  • Center for Employment Training
  • Career Academies (including new CA academies)
  • Models such as WA I-BEST also work for youth
  • Dual hs/college for out of school youth
  • Gates Foundation initiative to replicate
    Portland, OR model in Gateways to College. Goal
    is to complete high school and earn Assoc.
    degree at same time. Combines K-12 ADA s with
    college FTEs to enrich services.

46
Three key elements for states to fix leaky
pipeline, increase success
  • Track student outcomes across services, over
    time, and into the labor market use this data to
    set goals for improvement and to reward success.
  • Integrate basic skills services with workforce
    ed. to help lower skilled students earn
    credentials leading to family-supporting jobs
    more quickly.
  • Adapt financial aid policies to the needs of
    lower-skilled, working adults, and support their
    success in adult and postsec. ed. and training.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com