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Pathways to Prosperity: From Report to Action

Pathways to Prosperity: From Report to Action. Robert Schwartz. Education Level of U.S. Labor Force. Source: Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce, 2012. US “on time” completion rates are alarmingly low.

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Pathways to Prosperity: From Report to Action

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  1. Pathways to Prosperity: From Report to Action Robert Schwartz

  2. Education Level of U.S. Labor Force Source: Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce, 2012

  3. US “on time” completion rates are alarmingly low Note: Four-year schools have a six-year graduation window; two-year schools have a three-year graduation window. Source: Condition of Education, NCES, 2013

  4. By 2020, College for All does not mean everyone needs a BA – 65% of all jobs do not require a BA Source: Recovery 2020, Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce, 2013

  5. Examples of jobs that require middle skills Source: “Who Can Fix the Middle Skills Gap?” Harvard Business Review, 2012, T Kochan, D Finegold, P Osterman Data from Occupational Outlook Handbook, U.S. BLS, 2010

  6. In the face of increasing demand for skilled workers, we are unable to keep up… TODAY: • In a 2011 McKinsey survey of 2,000 U.S. companies, two thirds reported difficulty in filling job vacancies for reasons including: • insufficient job experience • unsuitable work habits • insufficient educational qualifications • poor communication ability I. Current Macroeconomic Trends

  7. In many European countries, over half of upper secondary students are in vocational education and training

  8. Share of Upper Secondary Students in Career Tech Availability of career-tech in secondary schools increases upper secondary graduation rates Source: OECD Education at a Glance

  9. School completion: Dramatic change in global skill supply U.S. rate has stagnated while most industrialized countries have improved. 1 13 1 27 Source: Schleicher (2007) based on OECD data. Approximated by percentage of persons with high school or equivalent qualfications in the age groups 55-64, 45-55, 35-44, and 25-34 years

  10. Percentage of Upper Secondary Completion, 25-34 y/o, 2011

  11. College level graduation rates • Even more alarming, U.S. college completion rates have stagnated while others have improved. Decline of the relative position of the US from 1995 to 2005 15 2 Source: Schleicher (2007) based on OECD data. Percentage of tertiary type A graduates to the population at the typical age of graduation.

  12. The skills gap hurts our global competitiveness We are falling behind in the educational attainment of our young people in an economy where human capital drives productivity and innovation from 4th… …to 12th I. Current Macroeconomic Trends Source: OECD Educational Attainment, 2007

  13. Innovation & Competitiveness: Switzerlandat Top Sources: EIS: European Innovation Scoreboard, 2012 WEF: Global Competitiveness Report, 2012 IMD: World Competitiveness Yearbook, 2012 ETHZ/KOF • Prof. Dr. Ursula Renold

  14. December 2012

  15. Four levels of pathways work

  16. PATHWAYS INITIATED VARIOUSLY ACROSS THE NETWORK Illinois: Governor, Illinois Pathways Interagency Committee Massachusetts: Secretaries of Education, Housing and Economic Development, and Labor and Workforce Development Missouri: Commissioner and Associate Commissioner of Education North Carolina: State Superintendent of Educationand CTE Director, State Community College System, NC New Schools Tennessee: Commissioner of Education, state CTE director California: Senate President pro Tem Georgia: State School Superintendent New York: Commissioner of Education Ohio: Columbus Compact

  17. SAMPLE STATE ENTRY POINTS… • Massachusetts: • Community colleges, WIBs, and employer associations leading the work in the regions • Three secretariats co-lead at the state level • Illinois: • IL Pathways Interagency Committee • Statewide Learning Exchanges • Tennessee: • Rural economic and community development strategy • Science park, strong employer partners (VW, Wacker)

  18. EXEMPLARY STATE POLICIES, RESOURCES, AND INITIATIVES: • New model legislation in some states, such as: • Career and College Promise, NC • AB 790 and SB 1070, CA (support Linked Learning approaches and expansion of career pathways) • New resources at state level, such as: • Learning Exchanges, IL • Innovation Campuses, MO • Performance Incentive Funds to Community Colleges, MA • Employers driving interest in advanced manufacturing and IT pathways, such as: • Volkswagen and Wacker in Chattanooga • Cisco, IBM, Microsoft, Motorola, SAP, and Verizon in Illinois

  19. Key implementation levers

  20. MOST PREVALENT CAREER AREAS OF FOCUS AND GREATEST PIPELINE DEVELOPMENT NEED Information Technology Cross-cutting and key to all 21st century careers, not just in IT fields Health Careers Growing field, career paths must be carefully chosen Advanced Manufacturing Few know the opportunities and salaries, stigma attached

  21. CHALLENGES TO SYSTEMS BUILDING • Early Career Advising • Most districts lack a systemic strategy to introduce young people to the world of careers beginning in middle grades • 9-14 Pathways • Few 9-14 pathways align and integrate high school career pathways with community college • Community colleges’ “high demand” career programs are not accessible to young entrants; therefore, integrated 9-14 programs of study must be built 23

  22. CHALLENGES TO SYSTEMS BUILDING (CONTINUED) • Intermediaries • Communities lack organizations to serve as the “glue” between schools, colleges and employers: to convene, muster resources, align education with labor market needs. Chambers, sector organizations need to step up. • Employer Engagement • Employers are not interested in general “please engage with schools” requests; instead, we need to engage employers to build talent pipelines for young professionals into specific career areas. 24

  23. EXEMPLARY POLICIES, RESOURCES, AND INITIATIVES • New model legislation in some states, such as: • Career and College Promise, NC • AB 790 (Linked Learning Pilot) and SB 1070 (CTE Pathways), CA • New resources at state level, such as: • Learning Exchanges, IL • Innovation Campuses, MO • Performance Incentive Funds to Community Colleges, MA • Employers driving interest in STEM fields, such as: • Volkswagen and Wacker in TN • IT employers in Illinois • Regional integrated 9-14 models • P-Tech in NYC, Chicago • Early colleges across NC, nation

  24. EXAMPLE: IL STATE-LEVEL STEM LEARNING EXCHANGES Provide Curriculum Resources Expand Access to Equipment Support Peer‐to‐Peer Networks Provide Work‐Based Learning Sponsor Challenges Provide Professional Development Provide Career Development Review Program of Study Model Review P‐20 Pipeline Performance

  25. Next steps for the network • State and regional work plans • One- and three-year implementation metrics and goals • Place-based strategies with practices and principles that can be scaled statewide • 9-14 high school/community college pathway design • Customized TA, support, and resources from JFF, Harvard, and other expert consultants around four levers • Based on work plan needs, with capacity-building focus • Webinars, convenings, site visits, coaching • Community of practice and Network collaboration • Phasing in GA, CA, OH, NY

  26. “And so tonight, I ask every American to commit to at least one year or more of higher education or career training. This can be community college or a four-year school; vocational training or an apprenticeship. But whatever the training may be, every American will need to get more than a high school diploma.” President Barack Obama Speech to Joint Session of Congress, February 2009

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