Report of the
Workforce Education Task Force Master Plan Committee
October 2, 1995
Consultants:
Jennifer Curry Villeneuve
Peggy Thompson
Special Acknowledgment:
Nancy Wolfe, Institutional Development, Research & Planning
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface iii
I. Introduction: Changes in the Nature of Work 1
II. San Francisco Bay Area Economic and Workforce Profile. 4
III. Learning for the 21st Century 9
Active Learning 10
Learning with Others 10
Learning in Context 11
Learning How to Learn 12
Learning with Technology 12
IV. City College Strengths and Weaknesses in Workforce Education 14
Strengths 14
Weaknesses 17
V. CityWorks: a Strategic Model for Excellence in Workforce Education
and Training 22
Student Populations 22
Career Clusters 23
Program Elements 25
Figure 1: School-Based Learning Activities Model 28
Figure 2: School-Based Learning Activities Model with Representative
Career Clusters 30
Infrastructure and Support Systems 37
Figure 3: A Model for Career Pathways and Certification Levels
41
VI. Using the CityWorks Model: a Strategic Plan
for High-Quality Workforce Education
44
Goals 44
CityWorks Organizational Chart 46
Table of Goals & Strategies 52
Endnotes 57
References 59
Appendix 64
SCANS Competencies 65
Teaching SCANS Competencies 71
CityWorks Workforce Education Model Program Worksheets 73
Glossary of Terms 77
PREFACE
Fall of 1994 brought together a group of instructors, counselors, and administrators at City College of San Francisco to answer the question: how can the college become more responsive to the needs of students who seek an education that equips them for the present and future labor market? This group produced the concept paper, “Workforce Education and Training System,” an initial vision for a comprehensive workforce education system at City College. The group continued to meet during the Spring 1995 semester, adding people to what eventually became known as the Workforce Education Task Force, a temporary subcommittee of the Master Plan Committee. Task Force efforts were enhanced by a generous grant from the Evelyn and Walter Haas Jr. Fund to facilitate the planning for workforce education. Two consultants were hired to assist the Task Force in its goal of developing a strategic plan.
In February of 1995, the Task Force approved the following mission
statement:
The Task Force recognizes that its activities exist in a time of great change in the United States’ economy and workforce and in formal education for careers. Many members of the group learned how community colleges are responding effectively to these changes at the second League for Innovation in the Community Colleges Workforce 2000 Conference in February. At the conference Dr. Winifred Warnat, Director of Vocational-Technical Education, United States Department of Education stated:
Reform of vocational-technical education in the United States is well underway. The reform is taking a number of significant shifts in thinking and direction. There is a basic shift from vocational-technical education to education for work. There is a shift in approach from job preparation to career preparation and a shift in student choices from college or vocational track to college and career pathways. Other shifts include a focus from special populations to all students; from a separate vocational track to integration with regular education; and from an emphasis on secondary education to one on postsecondary.
These shifts have already begun to affect City College. Now is an excellent time to prepare ourselves to meet the challenges brought on by these shifts. Our plans respond to the evolving economic environment, take into account new educational trends and research and build on the college’s strengths. It is our hope that this suggested strategic plan leads us to implement the most effective ways to meet the needs of students preparing for the world of work.
No matter where one looks today it is impossible to escape messages that the world of work is changing rapidly. Fortune magazine recently outlined six trends that will reshape the workplace:
Studies show employer dissatisfaction with workforce training.
Given the accelerated pace at which the U.S. economy has been tied
to global markets, it becomes increasingly important for American competitiveness
to improve our major strength — human resources. Yet, according to
recent studies, a deep chasm exists between the skills and abilities that
educational institutions provide and what employers want in workers.
Many American employers describe serious problems in recruiting qualified
candidates for even simple, entry-level jobs. A study conducted by
the U.S. Departments of Education, Labor, and Commerce, reported that two-thirds
of employers consulted assessed the pool of entry-level applicants as insufficiently
prepared even in basic skills. As the report points out, the
challenge of improving workers’ skills is particularly pressing in light
of the limited number of new entrants to the workforce: nearly 80
percent of those who will be in the workforce in the year 2000 are already
out of school and working.
In another report released in February 1995 by the Census Bureau on Hiring, Training and Management Practices in American Business, employers report that one-fifth of U.S. workers are not fully proficient in their jobs. Furthermore, employers express a lack of confidence in the ability of schools and colleges to prepare young people for the workplace. Researchers concluded that the lack of confidence illustrates an alarming divide between the schools and the workplace despite national calls for closer cooperation to improve the nation’s workforce and to improve the transition from school to work.
Community colleges can play an important role in maintaining and
improving the human resources of our country.
Community colleges, as well as high schools, are finding themselves
at the forefront of a battle to institute reforms that better support learning
and better prepare graduates to become self-sufficient contributors within
“high-performance” work settings. Six million students are enrolled
for credit in community colleges today, a 250 percent increase since the
late 1960s, and an estimated five million more are taking noncredit coursework.
Community colleges have been preparing students for work since their inception,
regardless of whether the student’s immediate goal is to transfer to a
senior institution or to immediately enter (or re-enter) the workforce.
Community colleges can create new systems for responding to employer and
worker needs.
In order to create a new system, partnerships must be formed with business and industry, with other education providers, and with community-based organizations. Furthermore, given the rapid pace of change, it is imperative to strengthen institutional capacity in order to develop such a system and ensure that the system is sustainable.
Numerous examples exist of successful community college workforce preparation efforts. (See Chapter III.) These examples involve collaboration among educational institutions, private and public sector employers, and public and non-profit agencies. They also involve radical restructuring of curriculum and extensive work-based learning opportunities for students. Many feature certification for students in generic core competencies and industry-defined skills. Most have required major rethinking and restructuring of traditional curriculum models. In many cases, these examples represent the kinds of significant redesigning community colleges will need in order to meet the workforce preparation challenges our country faces.
San Francisco is a world-renowned international city, famous for its history, culture, and geographic setting. It is blessed with an extraordinarily diverse and entrepreneurial population, a unique climate, beautiful natural resources, and an unmatched location for serving the Pacific Rim. San Francisco, along with its neighboring counties, offer a vast array of industries.
Each San Francisco Bay Area county has economic specialties.
The Planning Department of the City and County of San Francisco, in the April 1995 Commerce and Industry Inventory, reports that San Francisco is moving slowly out of the recession. It cites recent employment data that show signs of economic recovery both regionally and in San Francisco.
Reports from the Employment Development Department (EDD), the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), and the Center for the Continuing Study of the California Economy (CCSCE) also describe the economic recession of recent years. CCSCE predicts a recovery for a variety of economic sectors. However, the wealth generated should not be confused with job growth. For example, they predict continued growth in high tech areas as well as for export businesses, but this growth is vulnerable to what they call the “jobs-output paradox:” job losses occur despite record sales and profits. The export business, in fact, is expected to lose overall jobs.
ABAG concurs with this assessment in its 1994 projections. For the period 1993 to 1996, ABAG projects a real increase in gross exports from these sectors at 6.8 percent annually. Employment growth, however, should only average one percent annually over the same period. This suggests that output gains will not be translated into employment demand.
Particular industries will do better than others.
In California, two sectors of the economy—services and retail trade—will
account for over half of the job growth through 1998. Within
the services division, health and human services as well as business
services will account for over half of the growth. Many of these
high skilled jobs are in the technician category. According to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, the top three growth jobs in technical occupations
are Paralegals (86 percent), Radiologic Technicians (63 percent), and Medical
Records Technicians (61 percent). Furthermore, according to
Richman, job growth for technicians will “far outpace that for other workers
over the coming decade”. While many of these technician level
jobs require bachelor’s degrees, there are many that do not. With these
positions the associate degree enables students to gain entry into jobs
without cutting off the opportunity to eventually transfer and complete
a bachelor’s degree.
The EDD expects San Francisco County to grow by about 8,900 jobs during the 1992-97 period.
In the next few years, substantial payroll gains are expected particularly in temporary help agencies, building maintenance, advertising agencies, and private safety services. Legal services will also grow significantly. Government, however, who employs close to half the number of people in services, is expected to lose positions continuously through 1997. Defense cutbacks and the recent opening of a federal building in Oakland account for much of this job loss in San Francisco.
At 13.8 percent, employment in retail trade is another important area for San Francisco. The largest employment gains in retail trade are expected in food stores, restaurants, and apparel stores. Retail trade should show a 3.3 percent gain.
A major contributor to the San Francisco economy is the hospitality industry. More than 13 million people visit San Francisco each year, making tourism San Francisco’s number one industry. Tourism generates big dollars: visitors spend nearly $4 billion annually, boosting the local economy and providing a continuous flow of income for the business sector. Visitor spending totals more than $216 million of city revenues annually. It is estimated that over 66,000 jobs are directly supported by visitor spending in San Francisco, with a payroll in excess of $1 billion. Nearly half of these employees are ethnic minorities and more than 60 percent reside within San Francisco. When adding in the jobs generated by those businesses supplying the visitor industry, the employment impact is nearly doubled.
San Francisco is also a popular convention and meeting destination, adding to the impact of the overall hospitality industry. The city hosts over 200 trade shows and conventions annually, with the top 25 drawing more than 300,000 visitors. The newly opened Yerba Buena Gardens Cultural Center, featuring museums, galleries, theaters, and a dance studio, is expected to draw tens of thousands of tourists and shoppers to the area around the Moscone Center.
Other sectors are projected to lose jobs. Finance, insurance, and real estate jobs. made up 13 % of San Francisco’s jobs in 1990. Restructuring and relocation of banks and savings and loan organizations will contribute to a projected loss of 4,200 of 75,800 in this sector by 1997.
The smaller sectors of the job market—manufacturing (6.8 percent), transportation and public utilities (6.7 percent), wholesale trade (5.2 percent) and mining and construction (2.7 percent) are expected to reduce overall employment. Employment in durable goods manufacturing--metals, transportation equipment, etc.—is expected to fall 16.7 percent, which is much more than in non-durable goods, which will lose 3.1 percent of its workforce by 1997.
Bay Area employers have a broad range of sizes.
A number of large renowned employers have their corporate headquarters
in San Francisco including Bank of America, Bechtel, Chevron, Levi Strauss,
Pacific Gas and Electric, Pacific Telesis, and Wells Fargo.
The City is also a hub of West Coast finance and home to the district Federal
Reserve Bank and the Federal Home Loan Bank, the headquarters of the California
State Banking Department and the Pacific Stock Exchange. Yet,
only 82 firms, or one-fourth of one percent of all San Francisco firms,
has 500 workers or more.
Approximately 77 percent of the more than 62,000 firms in San Francisco and Northern San Mateo County have fewer than five employees. In San Francisco, more than half (17,047 of 32,149) of the business establishments have 14 workers or less. Small business services have replaced traditional corporate in-house functions in recent years, according to the recent City and County of San Francisco update.
The next decade’s workforce will differ from today’s workers.
During the late 1980s, the U.S. Department of Labor sponsored a well-known
report, Workforce 2000: Work and Workers for the 21st Century.
This influential project highlighted five key demographic facts:
This section presented an economic description for the San Francisco Bay Area. Overall, analysts are optimistic about the economy, focusing on a few key sectors. Health and human services, tourism and hospitality, emerging technologies such as those related to the biotech industry, and service industries in general look particularly promising in the years ahead. This section provided external economic analysis to add to the context from which to create a strategic plan for workforce education. The next section looks at new paradigms of teaching and learning considered in developing the plan.
Community Colleges are experimenting with new ways of learning.
At Shoreline Community College in Seattle, groups of 40 students and
two teachers are organized into learning communities linking career preparation
and English composition. People who want jobs as computer specialists
are learning how to write clear memos and technical documentation.
In Colorado, medical technicians in training at the Phillips Center of
the Community College of Denver are in class six-hours a day, five days
a week and must complete a 225-hour internship. Students can begin
any Monday, and the center is only closed on eighteen holidays a year.
In North Central Illinois, Rockford area manufacturers have created an
apprenticeship program that links high school courses, adult apprenticeships,
and the associate degree program at Rock Valley College. The high
school courses are taught at a factory, juniors and seniors get paid for
work experience, and scholarships toward college fees are awarded based
on first year grades. At the College of Marin in Northern California,
students in the multimedia A.S. degree program get experience in the on-campus
Digital Village, working with professional videographers, photographers,
digital audio technicians, animators, and other specialists in “virtual
studios.”
Experiments exist here at City College as well. Industry scientists teach laboratory sections in biotechnology. They informally interact with students creating more of a company atmosphere than a formal teacher-student relationship. Engineering will offer evening modules in welding, total quality management, and machine shop. Normally taught as eighteen week courses, each course will be broken down into sections covering particular aspects of a course. This shortened form will give students scheduling flexibility and accommodate students who only need updates in specific areas. Internships. A Title III grant will provide funds for instructors to learn multi-media techniques and incorporate them into their classes.
These examples represent ways of learning beyond what Terry O'Banion calls the “time-bound, place-bound, efficiency-bound, and teacher-bound" learning arrangements common in community colleges today. They also reflect recent research on learning and the diversity of students community colleges serve. They illustrate five concepts which are central to rethinking community college learning: active learning, learning with others, learning in context, learning how to learn, and learning with technology.
Active Learning
Active learning approaches—which are often called “student-centered
learning”, “hands-on learning," and “collaborative learning"—grow out of
a long tradition, going back in this country at least to John Dewey.
Modern research now shows that learning is a process of construction of
skills, ideas, and concepts rather than a process of absorption of information.
Students graft new knowledge onto what they already know and consolidate
and revise it by testing how well it works in the environment.
Traditional teacher-centered experiences express what some experts have called the “banking model of education—in which the teacher's role is to fill the student’s head by making deposits of information which the teacher considers to constitute true knowledge and the student's job is merely to store the deposits." Active, collaborative learning, in contrast, supports "constructed knowledge," knowledge that integrates personal experience with information received from others. Students who can construct knowledge can continue to learn and adapt as their workplaces and their lives change and challenge them in unexpected ways.
Optimal learning environments should be very rich in opportunities to try things out and get feedback. Students almost always learn best by solving open-ended problems. Teachers who want to maximize genuine learning will enrich their classrooms and laboratories with as much hands-on materials as possible, and will also enable students to test their new knowledge in a wide variety of real world settings including workplaces.
Learning with Others
Learning is very largely a social process. Students can almost
always accomplish more working with capable peers or teachers than they
can alone. Dialogue and discussion provide students with a forum
that requires clear expression of concepts. This forces students
to reflect on the ideas and skills they are learning. Conversely,
students can extend their thinking by critiquing the ideas of others in
dialogue with them. Studies also show that intellectual and
social connections with other students and faculty members are important
to students persistence and success in college. The effectiveness
of mentoring and apprenticeships with motivated crafts people may also
reflect the social nature of most learning. Particularly effective
social learning situations are fostered by learning communities.
These are curricular structures that link courses in different disciplines
around a common theme or question, serving students who stay together with
a team of instructors for periods of time up to an academic year.
They give students a deeper understanding and integration of the material
they are learning and interaction with one another and their teachers as
colleagues in learning. Collaborative learning and various real world
experiences are common features of learning communities.
Learning communities have much promise for workforce education. In fact, informal learning communities already are common in “vocational education," and may be one secret to the success of many programs at City College and at other community colleges. Programs in which a cohort of students take the same courses every term, and work with each other and a small faculty over several years, often have many characteristics of learning communities. Linking programs with classes that can provide students with additional skills needed for the workplace, such as labor studies or communications courses, could further strengthen these workforce education efforts.
Learning in Context
Research shows that prior knowledge and frameworks are needed for people
who are constructing new knowledge. Isolated facts and skills—presented
abstractly, without any context or reference points—are very hard to learn.
This fact explains the importance of work-based learning to workforce education.
Work-based learning—on campus and in the community—provides a rich context
for new learning.
Techniques for work-based learning on campus can include school-based businesses, workshops, and laboratories in which students log their time and are evaluated on their products, employer representatives conducting practice interviews for job-seeking students, guest speakers who demonstrate their products and describe their companies, and many other simulated real-world situations.
City College is uniquely positioned to provide learning at community and work sites. It has campuses throughout one of the most extraordinarily rich and complex cities in the world. It also has many existing partnerships with small and large businesses, schools and other colleges, community-based organizations, labor unions, and federal, state, and local government agencies. Relatively few students, however, are able to access the rich resources surrounding the college.
Site visits, paid and unpaid internships, job shadowing, offering classes at company and community locations, and linking the employment most students have already with college curricula are all ways to help students learn in settings off-campus. City College currently has some model programs offering these kinds of learning experiences, and growing expertise in locating opportunities, linking them to school-based learning, and supporting them with liability insurance, school staff liaisons, and other services.
Learning How to Learn
Employers repeatedly encourage educators to help students to “learn
how to learn." Today's workplaces require people who can continuously
learn new ways of serving customers, new technologies, and new ways of
doing business. Self-directed students become workers who can monitor
their learning efforts, and change paths if a current approach is not working.
Research shows that teachers can help students learn how to monitor and evaluate their own learning efforts by giving them explicit explanations and modeling particular tasks. Rather than teaching one right way to do things, teachers can give students helpful concepts and terms for thinking about learning, so that they can figure out new ways of doing things. Faculty also need to demonstrate and discuss their own problem-solving processes, so that students see that results do not appear magically, but evolve from processes in which they can become skilled.
Information about students' own learning styles and a model of experiential learning which stresses moving from concrete experience through reflection is useful. This learning process involves conceptualizing abstractly from experiences and reflections (some old, some new) and then experimenting with newly formed theories by putting them to the test of additional experiences and further reflection. Students feel successful as they repeat this learning cycle over and over, and have repeated opportunities to learn in ways which fit their personal learning style.
Learning with Technology
New stories abound in the popular press about how computers, multimedia,
net surfing, virtual reality and other new technologies will transform
education in the United States. Multimedia systems can give students
more control over their own learning, and when used with groups provide
very rich, multisensory experiences. Interactive distance learning
enables students to learn at their homes and worksites, individually or
in groups, from expert teachers. Computer simulations and robots
give students a feel for state-of-the-art equipment. Virtual tours
of factories of the future and highly-specialized “clean rooms" will give
students important experiences they could never get in real life.
Students from around the world can compare their designs for new tools,
share recipes and cooking techniques, or research data on the latest drugs
via the Internet.
Workforce education is likely to be transformed by technology, just as many global workplaces have been, in ways that are very hard to predict. However, it clearly has ever-increasing potential for facilitating active, social learning, and for giving students constant, objective information on their learning processes and progress.
In sum, community college faculty have always been concerned with how best to help students learn, and many are experts in student learning as well as experts in their disciplines and fields. Growing numbers are aware of the new research on learning, but most have been taught to think of learning as the transmission of facts rather than the construction of knowledge. With help in functioning as coaches, facilitators, and designers of learning, City College faculty will be able to help students dramatically improve their success in the workforce and in life generally.
If the ultimate goal of workforce education is to prepare students in the best way possible for the work place, then we must assess what already works well at the college, what needs improvement, and how we can use our strengths to enhance the areas found deficient. The identification of our strengths and weaknesses provides direction for workforce education planning.
Strengths
City College has many strengths to build on for workforce education:
1. City College offers a wide choice of courses and programs.
2. The majority of faculty stay current in their field of knowledge.
3. The heterogeneous student body supplies special resources.
4. CCSF provides education for a regional labor force.
1. City College offers a wide choice of courses and programs.
2. The majority of faculty stay current in their field of knowledge.
The knowledge and experience of our faculty is the basic resource we must rely on to build our workforce education successes. They are the ones who will make adaptations, work collaboratively, and carry out strategies proposed in this document.
3. The heterogeneous student body supplies special resources.
California and San Francisco, in particular, have large immigrant populations. Exposure to many cultures makes our students sensitive to others and more capable of working in today's multi-cultural settings. Those students with second language skills are especially in demand.
4. CCSF provides education for a regional labor force.
We have a Career Development and Placement Center which helps match students with employers, and a new Transition to Career Center, which will arrange work-site educational experiences for students. CCSF also has grants for four Ed>Net economic development and workforce education projects: Advanced Transportation Technologies, Biotechnology, Environmental Technology, and Workplace Literacy. We have received funds to start a Small Business Development Center through our School of Business.
These relationships with people and organizations can be used as a scaffolding for better and stronger partnerships in the future. Partnerships, which are key in a workforce plan, provide learning opportunities for faculty and students and create a dialog that keeps the college in tune with the needs of employers. When our students succeed in their jobs, they help maintain an enduring partnership between the college and employers as well as contribute to their own economic well-being and the general strength of the economy.
Weaknesses
While CCSF enjoys many strengths, there are challenges we must meet
in order to develop a comprehensive workforce plan. CCSF's main weaknesses
affecting a workforce plan are as follows:
1. Current programs are not sufficiently flexible to meet student needs.
2. No systematic mechanism exists for creating and sustaining partnerships
with the Bay Area community.
3. Curriculum is not integrated with the world of work.
4. National, state, and local skill standards are not recognized nor
routinely incorporated into curriculum.
5. Internal coordination for implementing a workforce plan is lacking.
1. Current programs are not sufficiently flexible to meet student
needs.
The evolving nature of the workforce requires an educational institution
to recognize changes and adapt quickly. This is a challenge for any
educational institution and CCSF is no different. Curriculum must
change with new technologies. Additionally, at CCSF there is a lag
time between curriculum development and delivery. Scheduling and
pinpointing a location to hold classes typically create a delay in service.
Rigid bureaucratic procedures in hiring and accounting are a problem.
Potential partners express concern about our ability to be flexible. How easily can we adapt our curriculum? What kind of rigidity in staffing must partners live with? Even other educational institutions have expressed concern with our lack of internal capacity to coordinate programs. How does our bureaucracy prevent us from responding quickly to initiatives? Can we incorporate new modes of delivery using computers, extra-classroom activities, distance learning, and modular scheduling?
Little of this was considered in the past because there was no need to make changes. City College must now learn to respond quickly while maintaining standards. We must be creative about working with our bureaucracy, and we must be open to perspectives that counter our long-held traditions.
2. No systematic mechanism exists for creating and sustaining partnerships
with the Bay Area community.
Some excellent partnerships exist at City College. These partnerships
have evolved through the hard work of individual, dedicated faculty and
administrators who saw opportunities and were able to create mutually beneficial
relationships. However, there are reasons why partnerships have been
limited. First, there is no strong, nor historic, tradition of forming
partnerships. Second, even when faculty possess the desire or recognize
an opportunity, the institution has not provided resources that would help
bring people together. Forming partnerships is a time-consuming,
evolutionary process--you must take time to get acquainted, and see if
you have the elements that allow for an effective partnership.
Third, community based organizations have reasons why they are hesitant to become involved with City College. These center on three concerns: access, cost, and flexibility. City College is a big place, and it's not obvious how to enter into relationships. One outside agency said they had thought about making connections for a number of years but felt daunted by the size. The director wasn't sure who to call or how to get started. When City College approached them, they were delighted to respond. CCSF must take the initiative more often and project an open, available, and welcoming attitude.
Cost of services are naturally a concern to everyone. Costs are not restricted to paying money to City College for a service. They also include the cost of providing staff time and energy. Community based organizations with limited budgets have to chose carefully where they focus their effort. Corporations typically feel that an activity must ultimately contribute to their bottom line.
Finally, the creation of partnerships has been piecemeal at City College. Some departments and programs have made this a priority and have had dedicated faculty developing relationships. Other departments have not had the interest or have not had willing recruiters with sufficient time and energy to pursue these ventures. In some cases sought-after partnerships have run into problems preventing them from developing as they should. Given our broad reach into the community and our capacity to deliver education and training in a wide range of subjects, we should be able to create, nurture, and sustain partnerships. To make this happen, however, we must recognize the value of partnerships, develop an action plan for creating and sustaining them, and provide the appropriate resources to carry out our plan.
3. Curriculum is not integrated with the world of work.
One of the hallmarks of an effective workforce education is that the
world of work is infused into both academic and vocational courses.
While no extensive survey has assessed how much of this really takes place
at CCSF, a sampling of programs found that some faculty have managed to
create this type of integration. However, the vast majority, like
faculty at most higher education institutions, have not.
A number of our vocational courses have not included sufficient academic material. This leaves vocational students without skills that help them adapt to other careers or to continue their education should they desire. Students who learn best in an applied setting can greatly benefit from an integration of English, writing, and math skills into vocational courses. Further, academic courses have not traditionally stressed connections to the world of work. When we relate what we are teaching in academic classes to careers, students can better understand how to use the knowledge they are learning and often retain more through attaching the learning to a context. Some academic subjects may benefit from placing them in an applied setting--English communication, applied physics, hands-on science. This type of integration can be found in a number of CCSF programs but expansion of this type of learning is highly recommended.
Another opportunity we have at City College is to integrate classroom based work with work-based instruction. How can we use our students' work situation as a learning situation? With close to 57% of our students in regular full- and part-time jobs and an additional number of students participating in internships, we have the potential for substantial work-based instruction.
Last of all, our department structure tends to isolate disciplines rather than bring them together and there is often a large distance between traditionally academic classes and traditionally vocational classes. This isolation, which exists at most higher education institutions, does not reflect the real world where disciplines are integrated and workers must bring together a wide range of skills and knowledge.
4. National, state, and local skill standards are not recognized
nor routinely incorporated into curriculum.
In 1990, the U. S. Departments of Education and Labor instituted a
series of projects in order to develop a national system of skill standards.
While the idea of skill standards has existed in a number of career areas
(e.g. construction, real estate), little has been done to achieve a coherent
national system. Additionally, most of the skill standards that do
exist have not had formal links to secondary and postsecondary education.
Since technology has been changing so rapidly, job skills are becoming more complex. In addition to technical skills, workers need to be able to think creatively, solve problems, and maintain good interpersonal skills. Those in the corporate sector have expressed concern about the lack of linkage of skill standards with the educational needs of employers. It has become increasingly more important to have industry talking with educational institutions. To this end, the SCANS Commission (The Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills), has brought people from various industries together with educators to identify skills students should have in each field. (See Appendix, pages 65-70.) This comprehensive setting of standards and competencies should bring a better linkage between educational institutions and labor market needs. Students will enter the market with appropriate skills, and employers will be assured of having an adequately trained workforce.
These skill standards have now been established for some subjects taught at City College, however, very few faculty are aware of these or have begun to use them as part of their teaching and evaluation. CCSF faculty can take an active role by joining committees and becoming part of the process to develop standards. We need to make faculty aware of the standards and to provide workshops on how to incorporate these standards into their coursework. (See Appendix, pages 71-72 for examples of teaching SCANS competencies.) A mechanism to routinely incorporate skill standards should be established.
5. Internal coordination for implementing a workforce plan is lacking.
The evaluation of CCSF's strengths and weaknesses is not an easy task
because the college is large, diverse, and decentralized. While assessment
is challenging, implementation of general plans that affect all campuses
may not even be possible without some type of permanent, internal, cross-institutional
structure to ensure that a comprehensive workforce education plan is implemented.
Right now, responsibilities are unevenly disbursed throughout the college without any central office or individual taking charge. Programs are created in various pockets around the college without others benefiting from the knowledge of their successes and failures. Communication, which is a cornerstone of successful workforce education, is limited and sporadic and until now has not been fostered.
To effectively implement a workforce education program, a flexible and
coordinated structure is needed for making changes in the curriculum, for
developing partnerships, and for enhancing faculty and staff development.
The structure should have the capacity to experiment, pilot programs, and
evaluate its efforts. It also needs to be a repository of information
and the central communicator of what is learned.
V. CITYWORKS: A STRATEGIC MODEL FOR EXCELLENCE IN WORKFORCE EDUCATION AND TRAINING
Thus far we have considered the economic forecasts for the Bay Area,
recommendations coming from current research, and City College’s strengths
and weaknesses. Before presenting our plan, there are four elements
that must be identified:
STUDENT POPULATIONS
It is essential to take student diversity into consideration when formulating
a conceptual model. Age, ethnicity, and reasons for attending the
college create different needs for students. Because students come
to City College at various times in their lives with a variety of characteristics
and requirements, we must offer different educational responses to fit
their needs. Five categories of students have been identified which
can help us craft our programs:
1. Students Preparing for College Level Education. These students are significantly underprepared academically, and are in need of extensive help with basic skills and many support services. They may or may not be associated with programs targeting underserved populations, such as JTPA, GAIN, or GATES.
2. Recent High School Graduates. These students, who have completed high school in the last five years or so, are the emerging workers of tomorrow. They often enroll at City College seeking a degree or certificate to prepare to enter the workforce or to continue their education. These students tend to have fewer work experiences, and may be unclear about their education goals.
3. Students Seeking Retraining. These students attend City College in search of retraining skills to re-enter the workforce, often in industries quite different from their previous experience. Displaced workers as well as young adults making the transition from a “job” to a “career” are in this group. These students may have considerable work experience that can be valuable as they pursue further education.
4. Students Seeking Upgrading. These students are primarily incumbent workers in search of upgrading certain skills in order to change jobs or to advance in current positions. They often move in and out of college courses and programs as their career needs change.
5. Entrepreneurial Students. These students often enroll in courses and use services to advance their self-employment, small business and professional pursuits. They seek customized education to meet their specific educational and career goals.
These different types of students have implications for each program element in the frame-work. For example, work-based learning activities for entrepreneurial students may be quite different for students recently out of high school who have had very little work experience. Similarly, students who have worked to improve their spoken and written English skills will be more successful in college and in finding and keeping work than counterparts who have not mastered basic English skills. These categories help us to focus on students as learners and remember that there is no one way to educate all people for careers.
CAREER CLUSTERS
Career clusters are groups of related workforce education programs
which require common foundation skills and core competencies. They
are an important feature of current efforts to reform workforce education
in schools and colleges because they address the fact that industries and
careers are rapidly changing and that students often know little about
career options or how their interests and skills match different careers.
As students master the core competencies in a cluster, they learn about
their capabilities and about various occupations in the cluster.
As they move close to entering (or re-entering) the work force, they can
concentrate on the specific skills needed for jobs which are available.
As industries change, grounding in a career cluster enables workers to
adapt.
Career clusters have been created in two ways—by skill sets and by economic sectors. For example, computer application skills are used in almost every industry. Other skills which are found in many sectors of the economy are accounting, writing, public speaking, and some kinds of research and analytical skills. The Task Force recognized the attractiveness of many skills to employers but decided to organize clusters primarily by economic sector. People who are knowledgeable about a broad field such as Health Sciences, as well as educated in a specific certificate or degree program like nursing or radiation technology, can handle the rapid changes medical careers are undergoing. It should be relatively easy for them to add additional credentials as needed.
While the Task Force does not wish to dictate how clusters will be created in the context of existing City College campuses, schools and departments, we did want to identify clusters that could be used in pilot programs. Clusters bring together groups of faculty from different areas to work on core competencies and program congruence at the same time as their current school and department relationships are maintained.
We attempted to define each cluster area using both external analyses
as well as internal assessment. In choosing which clusters
to begin the pilot projects, the Task Force considered the following criteria:
• Labor market information and economic analysis.
• Population of students served, based on the five types of students.
• Industry skill standards as well as performance-based assessment.
• Capacity of existing departments and schools to organize into clusters.
• Capacity for partnerships with industry, other education providers,
and community-based organizations.
• Existing and potential activities which support connections
between the college and employers.
• Curriculum redesign issues raised by the Learning Activities Model.
• External and internal funding potential.
Five economic sector clusters at City College were identified. A sixth cluster, Emerging Sciences, Arts and Technologies, was created recognizing that some emerging careers cross existing disciplines or involve skills for which the college is not currently prepared. This unit may be an incubator for programs which will eventually become part of other clusters.
The six clusters we considered for pilot projects were:
PROGRAM ELEMENTS
The School to Work Opportunities Act of 1994 states that three types
of activities must be included in a comprehensive workforce education program:
school based, work-based, and connecting activities (connecting activities
are ones that that link employers with the college and other workforce
education partners). The Task force has incorporated these elements
into their planning but has changed the structure to better fit our planning
model. Program elements are restructured as:
School-based learning includes:
• Career awareness and career exploration.
• Selection of a career major.
• Rigorous program of study made up of academic standards consistent
with Goals 2000 standards.
• Instruction that integrates academic and vocational learning
via applied and contextual teaching methodologies
(Applied Academics).
• Regularly scheduled evaluations to benchmark and monitor student
progress.
• Procedures that facilitate entry of participating students
into additional training.
Work-based learning includes:
• Work experience, job shadowing, school-sponsored enterprises,
or on-the-job training.
• Planned program of job training and work experiences coordinated
with school-based component and related
to student’s career major.
• Workplace mentoring.
• Instruction in general workplace competencies—positive work
attitudes, employability, and participative skills.
• Broad instruction in all aspects of the industry.
Both types of learning experiences are critical for students preparing for the world of work, and the most effective curricula will include both. It is important to note, however, that school-based and work-based experiences are not defined by where they take place, but rather by the substance of the learning activity. The notion that work-based learning takes place only at an employer site, and school-based learning is restricted to campus is obsolete. Both types involve learning that can happen on campus as well as off. For example, distance learning provides learning opportunities at workplaces and homes. Industry personnel sometimes teach classes on campus.
It is also useful to think about two types of work-based learning: school for work and school and work. School-for-work programs are education and training programs which have preparation for work as their major purpose, and work follows schooling. These work-based programs typically occur on campus. School-and-work programs, such as youth apprenticeships, school-based enterprises, cooperative education, and some Tech Prep programs, combine school and work programs at the same time. These work-based programs typically have some of their learning take place off-campus where employers provide paid and unpaid internships and work experience.
The need to integrate work related and academic education in high schools and community colleges is very serious and well documented. Work-based learning must be an integral part of a program’s curriculum. Exposure to workplace experiences in conjunction with school-based learning prepares students more thoroughly for entering or re-entering the workforce. According to a recent Educational Quality of the Workforce (EQW) Issues editorial, completion of schooling is no longer adequate training for entry level workers: “Young people are now faced with a challenge to find the mix of education and on-the-job training that will qualify them for new jobs.”
City College currently offers many work-based learning opportunities. A limited survey conducted for the Task Force identified 25 programs at CCSF which include some form of work-based learning, such as work-based units in their curriculum and formal and informal internships. However, only a small number of students are served by these existing efforts and we believe that many more students would benefit from greatly expanded work-based learning activities.
To accomplish this, City College curricula can be redesigned to offer
work-based and school-based learning for three levels of skills (illustrated
in Figure 1 on page 28):
• Foundation skills
• Core competency skills within a cluster
• Program-specific skills
Foundation Skills (inner circle on Figure 1) include basic reading, writing, and computation skills; basic familiarity with computers and technology; personal development competencies such as study skills and time management; and the first level of skills and abilities as identified in the Secretary’s Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills (SCANS) report (See Appendix, pages 65-70). These skills are necessary to succeed in reaching any community college goal, i.e. completing a course, completing a re-training program, entering or re-entering employment, earning an AA/AS degree, transferring to a four-year college, or fulfilling a personal learning plan. The exact foundation will be determined by the college faculty, but foundation skills are universal and would be required of all students matriculating toward a certificate or degree, regardless of cluster.
Faculty will also devise a range of assessment tools to help determine which of these skills students already possess--many students will already have some or all of these skills. Individual Learning and Service Plans would document these skills.
Core Competency Skills (the next level of abilities and the middle ring on the circle on Figure 1) have higher level requirements in mathematics, English, technical fields, social science, and other subjects. Core competencies also include the next level from SCANS. (See Appendix, pages 65-70) They would be required of all students in a cluster since these are the basics needed to succeed in any program in a cluster. They could be achieved through an “Introduction-to-Cluster-X” course as well as beginning general courses. While these might be cluster-specific, they may also be quite similar to the competencies outlined for
Figure 1
School-Based and Work-Based Learning Activities Model
another cluster. Where similarities exist, coordination and collaboration are encouraged. Cluster faculty will determine core competencies methods for assessment. Figure 2 (page 30) shows how career clusters interact with the components of the Learning Activities Model presented in Figure 1.
Program Curriculum Skills (the outer ring of Figure 1) includes the more advanced SCANS skills. There are likely to be different curricula for various entry-level occupations, but several share specific courses. These curricula will include technical skills and other program-specific requirements. They will be designed by program faculty in consultation with business and industry advisors. Program faculty will also determine methods of assessing these curriculum skills.
One of the biggest challenges of this model will be providing work-based learning activities throughout a student's college experience. These activities will differ depending on a student's progress and should increase in complexity as the student gains skills and experience. For example, students enrolled in Foundation Skills courses (inner ring) might be conducting informational interviews with employers in fields they are exploring, or working on their employment autobiographies as a way of identifying their career interests. Students enrolled primarily in Core Competency courses and using services focused on this intermediate level might participate in job shadowing or internships that help them explore certain parts of a cluster. Students at the level of the outer ring, the Program Curriculum, will experience more sophisticated versions of work-based experiences such as cooperative education, apprenticeships, or focused internships.
2. Career decision-making and educational planning
The School-to-Work Act envisions that all students will explore their
interests and talents and learn about the world of work throughout their
school years, and that these processes will continue and be refined at
community colleges. A subcommittee of our Task Force worked on the
concept to provide students with career decision-making and educational
planning experiences and services at CCSF.
Currently, large numbers of City College students enter the college undecided about their futures; many report transfer or job preparation as goals without really knowing what these labels mean. They need many guidance and counseling services, but because they
Figure 2
School-Based and Work-Based Learning Activities Model with Representative
Career Clusters
are unclear about what questions to ask or what services are offered, many students do not seek help.
Effective career decision-making and educational planning must include activities that are student-centered, facilitate student success, and are available throughout the student’s involvement with CCSF. Many people will receive these services over and over throughout their lives, as they move in and out of work and school. These services must take into account where students are developmentally in their career-decision process in order to recommend appropriate learning experiences. This system includes:
It has much to build on in creating programs for the five student populations discussed earlier--students who are preparing for college-level education, recent high school graduates, people needing retraining and upgrading, and current and potential entrepreneurs. City College currently provides remedial entry-level courses for students involved in skills training at a number of community-based organizations, including the Asian Neighborhood Design, the Mission Language and Vocational School, and the Career Resource Development Center. Programs and services which fit these students' needs will encourage them to continue their education at the college. Similarly, Tech Prep collaborations with the San Francisco Unified School District, such as the Biotechnology Tech Prep program at Balboa and other high schools, will give high school students meaningful contacts with the college before they graduate.
Most people seeking retraining, upgrading or entrepreneurial education come to the college on their own, but the college has relationships with many employers, particularly through its Contract Education Program, and with labor unions and community groups. Through these relationships the college can reach currently employed people who want new or more advanced skills. The new Small Business Development Center being created by the college in cooperation with San Francisco State and many other partners will improve outreach to small business people and other entrepreneurs.
As part of our CityWorks planning we hope to strengthen the college's recruitment efforts for Workforce Education programs and services as well as for students interested in other aspects of the college. Systematic recruitment activities and materials in many different languages should improve our current approaches.
Intake. When entering a community college, students need special services to help them identify appropriate programs for their needs. At City College this is especially true because our students arrive from a number of different places and with vastly different needs--recent high school graduates, graduates of four-year colleges seeking career training, recent immigrants in search of language and job training, displaced workers; displaced homemakers, high school drop-outs, employees seeking cross-training and career advancement, and others. City College currently offers some intake services such as counseling, advisement, matriculation and student support services. A workforce education system would provide strengthened comprehensive counseling and career orientation services, including information about the introductory courses in career clusters.
Career Decision-Making. In the United States, young people often spend most of their twenties moving in and out of a variety of jobs, trying to find careers with benefits and opportunities for advancement. Older people also struggle to find work that is satisfying and rewarding, having seldom made conscious and well-informed choices about careers. The Task Force wants to give people valuable assistance with career-decision making. This help would include personal counseling, aptitude and skills assessment, exploratory experiences in work places, information about the workforce, career clusters and specific jobs, and information about the payoff of various educational options.
This last item is particularly important, because extensive research shows that there are substantial benefits to completing community college certificates and associate degrees. These benefits occur when community college programs allow students entry into positions where they can accumulate consistent work experience and on-the-job training for “careers" rather than “jobs." 8 Additional benefits vary by program and have been found to affect earnings more for women in some fields and for men in other fields. Up-to-date information on various fields should be readily available to students.
Educational Planning. With the information and assistance described above, new students will choose a tentative career path and course of study and then be helped with the creation of an Individual Learning and Services Plan. These plans will be carried with them by students as they move in and out of work and education, at City College or other institutions. As they proceed along their chosen educational path, students will modify their goals and access additional services. Furthermore, they will be able to change course within a career cluster as their interests and abilities become more apparent. The shifting of educational objectives within a cluster will be allowed without the loss of time or credits until students are in the final stages of their programs.
Job Placement. As students are successfully completing a course of study, job placement services will be guaranteed. Existing job placement services at City College are minimal. The college will examine how best to deliver these services and ensure coordination that will maximize existing relationships. A positive working relationship with business and industry is necessary for all workforce education activities, and particularly for placement. Employers who provide internships and other work-based learning experiences frequently offer career employment to students.
Lifelong Learning. Today's workforce requires continuous improvement and upgrading of workers' skills. With its broad range of programs and services, including contract education, City College can meet many lifelong learning needs. Flexibility to come in and out of the system, is built into the model.
The Career Decision-Making and Educational Planning components presented here are a significant departure from current ways of operating. This plan strives for closer relationships between services and programs than we now have. Students will experience coherent sets of activities which inform and reinforce one another. For example, aptitude testing may suggest that students rethink their initial ideas about careers, or student observations at work sites may prompt changes in their Individual Education and Service Plans.
City College services urgently need to be integrated into a much more efficient and effective system. In some cases the college may not be able to provide services to particular students as effectively as some of its community-based organization partners can. Some students will be better served at less cost if the college is able to work collaboratively with others and utilize the recruitment, screening, orientation, counseling and/or job placement services of community-based organizations which serve particular neighborhoods or groups of students.
The Task Force has two general recommendations to enhance the career decision-making and educational planning in existence:
The impetus for this program came from the Hilti Corporation, a manufacturer of metal fasteners headquartered in Liechtenstein. Hilti established its western hemisphere headquarters in Tulsa in 1980, then could not find the quality of craft employees it was used to in Europe. In 1990, Hilti arranged for a group of Tulsa Chamber members and their spouses to visit European apprenticeship programs. Discussions based on this experience led in 1992 to the first group of 16 high school juniors in Craftsmanship 2000.
Selection for the program depends on a combination of achievement, aptitude and interest tests. During their junior and senior years in high school, Craftsmanship 2000 participants spend eight hours a day at the Technology Center--four hours in academic classes and four in the machine shop. They are taught a rigorous, outcome-based curriculum by a team of high school and Technology Center instructors. Each student receives a stipend, furnished by employers, and works full time in the summer at a participating firm. After graduation, many go on to Tulsa Junior College and earn an associate's degree. The college awards the apprentices 25 credit hours for their Craftsmanship 2000 experience after they complete 12 units on the campus.
Project Protech was started in 1991 by Boston hospitals which were worried about turnover among their lab technicians, physicians assistants and other support personnel. New employees would complete extensive training at the hospitals' expense, work diligently and leave within the year. In cooperation with the city's schools and Private Industry Council, Protech helps recruit and support at risk students through completion of high school and matriculation in postsecondary education. Of 54 seniors in the Protech class of 1994, 49 had accepted enrollment at postsecondary schools by September and at least 60% were studying for health industry careers. Protech now grooms students for business, finance and utility company careers, and has received a $1.2 million federal School-to-Work implementation grant for reaching 380 students in Boston schools in the next two years.
Protech's most notable connecting activity is a large staff which provides extensive, personal support services for participants--helping them get to school and work on time, referring them to community agencies for needed assistance, and assisting them with college application forms. This support is essential for the population Protech serves, which includes many people from troubled urban neighborhoods. Also, much of Protech's instruction happens at workplaces, providing another important connection.
The Lehigh Valley Business-Education Partnership was started in the late 1980s by school superintendents and the recently retired Chief Executive Officer of a Fortune 500 company who has been Chairman of the American Council of Education, United States Chamber of Commerce, and the national chamber's Education Committee. As of mid-1995, the partnership, renamed the Lehigh Valley 2000: Business-Education Partnership has completed action plans, published a variety of resource documents, provided summer internships for teachers at local companies and created a Lehigh Valley Leadership Academy. Its Roads to Success, available in both English and Spanish, describes approximately seventy enrichment opportunities for children and youth in the Lehigh Valley. Its annual Business Education Fall Showcase is a one-day event open to the public, and its Strategic Planning Tools handbook is used by at least six Lehigh Valley school districts.
This partnership is a national model of the kind of cooperation possible between education, business and community leaders. Its comprehensive range of connecting activities should encourage similar efforts in San Francisco.
City College Connecting Activities
City College is already working on important connecting activities
of its own. The most significant and promising may be the Bay Area
Transition to Career Center, an effort to strengthen and coordinate the
college's capabilities for facilitating internships and broad partnerships
with industry, other education providers and community based organizations.
The Walter S. Johnson gave the college a two-year, $150,000 grant to start
the Center in 1995.
The new Center is becoming a common contact point for all City College paid and volunteer internship activities and for employer involvement with internships. This fall it will publish an Internship Program Handbook that will support new internship development efforts, standardize program procedures and data collection, and document the range of existing and proposed internship opportunities. The Center is also building relationships around internships and other workforce education activities with the San Francisco Unified School District. Under the name “The Career Connection," the Center will market the colleges' programs and students to potential internship sponsors while educating City College faculty, staff and students about internships. Next year the Center will develop and sponsor a model seminar series for interns from a variety of programs, so that they can help each other with communications skills and other work competencies, reflect on what they are learning from their assignments and be supported in integrating what they learn from their internships with their on-campus study.
The Transition to Career Center will continue to help develop college-wide capacities for improving the school-to-work transition through internships and other work-based learning. They will also manage some innovative programs directly, involve other community colleges and regions of the Bay Area in its programs and services, and research work-based learning and communicate its results to the college community and to the larger Bay Area.
INFRASTRUCTURE AND SUPPORT SYSTEMS
In creating an integrated workforce education system, City College
faces an enormous challenge: developing career clusters; delivering
programs which integrate connecting activities with school-based and work-based
learning activities, including career decision-making and educational planning;
and tailoring these programs for various student populations, working all
the while with a wide variety of employer, educational and community partners.
Accomplishing these tasks will require significant changes in the College's
support systems and infrastructure. While many different aspects
of the college will be affected, this discussion focuses on seven key items:
1. funding
2. facilities
3. educational delivery systems
4. skill standards and portable credentials
5. performance assessment
6. job placement
7. staff development
8. partnerships
1. Funding
Federal and state moneys to support Workforce Education are likely
to be modest and very competitive. To create effective School-to-Work
programs, the colleges will have to free up money by restructuring and
redesigning many existing programs and services, reallocate existing revenues
and acquire new sources of support. They will need funds for staff
development and faculty training in new careers. They will need staff
to create and manage partnerships and programs, to redesign curricula,
to develop and facilitate internships and other work-based learning, and
to develop jobs for graduates. They may need fund-raising staff to
help them meet partnership requirements and grant matches.
The Task Force recommends that the college concentrate whatever funds it has for Workforce Education in the next few years on pilot projects that come as close as possible to including every aspect of the Learning Activities and Career Decision-Making and Educational Plan models we propose. It believes that the most effective pilot projects will be in cluster areas where high-paying career openings are available. Once established, the programs will provide a model to be used to establish programs in other career clusters throughout the college.
2. Facilities
Most of City College's facilities were designed for a kind of learning
that is disappearing. It will have to retrofit buildings, adding
flexibility, responsiveness and a capacity for customization to as many
facilities as possible. City College also needs to create a network
of community locations for work-based and school-based learning in space
which is either donated or made available to colleges for nominal fees.
Finally, the college needs to maximize its capability for all kinds of
distance learning and probably create some “virtual campuses" for learners
who are unable to come to college facilities.
3. Educational Delivery Systems
The number of students who can take on-campus, full-time day programs
over several years is relatively small. Today's students need access
to modularized learning at their homes, workplaces, and local community
centers. Distance learning and other forms of technology can make
learning possible for people unable to come to the college. Various
scheduling arrangements are also needed. Some people want to be part
of learning communities, others need great flexibility and independence
to meet their goals. More and more, education will be available anytime,
anywhere, and delivered many different ways.
There are numerous examples of effective teaching and learning strategies being used by community college faculty across the country that are moving in this direction. Two examples are “Learning Communities,” where faculty coordinate courses and assignments in blocks for cohorts of students and “Open-entry/open-exit” courses that facilitate self-paced learning for students whose learning styles and preference do not match traditional structures. Classes coordinated with community-based organizations also are often more flexible and increase accessibility.
4. Skill standards and portable credentials
Employers complain that high school diplomas or community college degrees
do not tell them what skills graduates have. Oregon and other states
are mandating various certificates of mastery for all high school students,
and the federal government has funded twenty-one different efforts to develop
voluntary national skills standards in fields as diverse as printing, electronics,
retail trade, and biotechnology. California's School-to-Work Plan
commits the state to similar efforts.
City College students need workforce education programs which will give them demonstrable, measurable skills and portable credentials that employers recognize. The faculty should document the students’ skills at various points during a program, so that students have proof of their skill and competency levels.
5. Performance assessment
Performance standards raise important questions about accurate methods
of assessing whether a student has learned a skill or has mastered a competency.
Traditional assessment methods such as teacher-created paper and pencil
objective tests provide limited information on students' real skills.
A broader kind of assessment has many purposes, including seeing if people
can use what they've learned appropriately in the real world; giving students
and teachers information on students' ability to solve problems and apply
what they know to new contexts; and giving students feedback on what they've
learned so that they can improve their skills.
Assessment practices that give students and teachers useful information on skill mastery are often described as “performance assessment" tools and strategies. Examples include open-ended tasks, observations of students at work, and individual and group portfolios or projects. Writing is frequently involved, because writing clarifies and reveals thinking. Video simulations, multimedia presentations, panel discussions, and other forms of presentations are also common. A combination of these approaches can accommodate individual preferences for different media and/or differences in communication styles.
One national effort to create a variety of examinations for a Certificate of Initial Mastery proposes three components: performance examinations, assessments of student projects, and assessments of a portfolio of student work. This New Standards Project describes these assessments as very much like the scout merit badge system. Students will be able to accumulate “badges” over a period of years, work at their own pace, and compare their own performances against a set of published criteria.
Figure 3 (page 41) shows how a foundation skills certificate could be the basis of a system of certification for high schools in California. Young people could have a variety of routes for workforce education after completing a Certificate of Foundation Skills at 16, including entering a community college, completing a recognized certificate similar to today's vocational program certificates and/or an associate's degree, then transferring to a four-year college, going to work, or both.
Figure 3
A MODEL FOR CAREER PATHWAYS AND CERTIFICATION LEVELS
6. Job Placement
Job placement builds accountability and feedback into workforce education
programs, giving faculty continuous readings on the demand for the skills
they are helping people learn. It will also be a requirement for
programs which receive School-to-Work funding, for which City College will
compete with private proprietary schools and non-profit training agencies
which document their placements carefully.
Several units of the college now have job placement activities. These efforts, which are generally grant-funded, usually address narrowly defined student populations and may be regarded as peripheral to the college. Currently, representatives of the various job development and placement programs meet regularly to work at coordinating services. This ex-officio coordinating group is developing methods for sharing job and employer information, resources, and databases. Group meetings provide a forum for identifying placement system needs and developing collaborative strategies for addressing needs. this voluntary effort should be recognized and supported by the college.
The college should work towards moving job placement from the periphery to full integration into workforce preparation programs. In doing so, the college also needs to create a more effective system for tracking placement in order to respond to increasing demands for accountability and to provide a measure of program currency and effectiveness.
7. Staff Development
The provision of staff development for faculty is crucial to making
the changes we propose. In order to create new curriculum, work effectively
with partners, and develop new evaluation tools, faculty will need training
and assistance. This training must be flexible in time and place.
It should also provide incentives for faculty such as stipends and release
time so that faculty realize that the college values their spending time
on making this system work.
8. Partnerships
City College already has many different partnerships, with K-12 schools
and four-year colleges, foundations and other public and private funders,
individual employers and
employer groups, industry organizations and community groups, and local,
regional and state agencies Often these partnerships are informal
and depend on personal relationships between a very small number of college
and partner staff. The college needs partnerships that are more strongly
institutionalized, that are organized and funded for success and longevity,
and that involve many different programs, personnel, and students.
It is in the interest of City College and its students to expand and strengthen
the institutional capacity to develop and sustain effective partnerships.
Integrating All the Elements--the Program Worksheet
The CityWorks Program Worksheet (see Appendix, pages 73-76) presents
all the elements of the Task Force's Model for Excellence in Workforce
Education--student populations, career clusters, program elements, and
support systems--in one display. Pilot projects which include all
these components will be developed during 1995-6 and give City College
a sense of the usefulness of this model. The Strategic Plan in Chapter
VI presents the Task Force's recommendations for how to move toward experimenting
with the model in several clusters and adopting it across the college over
time.
VI. USING THE CITYWORKS MODEL: A STRATEGIC PLAN FOR HIGH- QUALITY WORKFORCE EDUCATION
This section presents five goals for strengthening workforce education
throughout City College. As used here, goals are broad statements
desired by City College and its individual and organizational constituents.
They are operationally specified by a set of strategies and related actions
from Chapter V. As the implementation plan moves forward, strategies
and actions will be modified, added, or deleted.
Goal 1: Promote a collegewide commitment to a new workforce
education plan.
Goal 2: Establish a collegewide infrastructure to support the plan
Goal 3: Establish working model of the CityWorks plan.
Goal 4: Promote the highest levels of student success, student
learning and teaching excellence.
Goal 5: Disseminate CityWorks to other CCSF Departments and
Schools
Goal 1: Promote a collegewide commitment to a new workforce
education plan.
City College has a long and successful history of providing educational
services to students seeking to enter the workforce for the first time
and to those wishing to retrain and upgrade their skills. The CityWorks
plan recognizes that the college must take some additional steps to align
CCSF programs with the new dramatic developments occurring in the workplace.
The first step has been taken with the completion of the CityWorks plan.
The second step is the building of a working consensus among members of
the CCSF community about the plan and a strong stated commitment from the
leadership of the college endorsing the goals and objectives of the CityWorks
plan. This would include a statement of support from the Board of
Trustees.
Goal 2: Establish a collegewide infrastructure to support the plan
The CityWorks plan requires an institutional commitment of human and financial resources over a five year period. Once the Board of Trustees and the Chancellor have resolved to support the plan, strategies would need to be established to build the appropriate internal support for the plan. This would include creating:
Organizational Groups
In addition to establishing a special fund and a coordinator’s position,
the college would create several organizational structures to plan, implement,
manage, and oversee workforce education programs. These groups would
not require bringing on additional staff but would represent a reconfiguring
of current staff:
Technical Assistance Workgroup
The Technical Assistance Workgroup would facilitate the work of specific
pilot projects, especially as it applies to implementation of new learning
activities and career decision making and educational planning. This
group can provide assistance to faculty and staff who are responsible for
implementing parts of the plan. Included in the Workgroup would be faculty
and staff who have successfully implemented workforce education courses
and programs, representatives from the Office of Staff Development, Information
Technology Services, Admissions and Records, Financial Aid, and Matriculation,
members from other colleges, and employers from the cluster area.
Chancellor's Advisory Panel on Workforce Education
CCSF would establish a group to ensure a high level of visibility within
the employer sectors as the workforce plan is implemented. A quarterly
meeting convened by the Chancellor and her staff would be held to exchange
information, report on new developments, provide progress reports and hear
new ideas with private and public sector employers in and around the City
and County of San Francisco.
Council of Partnerships
A Council of Partnerships would be established to pursue linkages with
education institutions, employers, public agencies, and community based
organizations. It would coordinate discussions between external organizations
and CCSF programs interested in pursuing the CityWorks model. Working
with the new Career Connection program, the Career Development and Placement
Center, and other well-established college programs with partnerships,
the office would act as a broker to create new projects and programs between
City College and employers throughout the region for internships, other
work-based activities, and connecting activities. A database of employers
interested in providing work-based learning opportunities would be available
to all CCSF programs.
Goal 3: Establish working model of the CityWorks plan.
The CityWorks plan we are suggesting will, of course, be modified and refined as it is disseminated throughout the campus. After this input, a pilot program can be implemented. A piloting strategy enables the college to focus resources on a limited number of projects and allows the faculty to test and improve the model before it is established in other clusters.
To review, chapter V discussed the program elements that would be part of our model including:
The next element of the model includes the career-decision making and educational planning activities. To be successful in careers, many community college students need a variety of services including extensive assistance in developing personal career education goals. A Task Force subcommittee has worked on identifying the elements of a comprehensive system of student services, describing how these services could be improved and integrated with one another and with learning experiences. Current services, particularly recruitment, counseling and career advising would be strengthened.
Another part of the plan calls for enhancing college job placement operations. We can improve coordination of activities and allocate additional resources to ensure that all students receive appropriate job placement services.
Connecting activities are an essential part of workforce education. To have a successful program, City College must provide technical assistance and services to employers in designing work-based learning components and case management services while also training teachers, workplace mentors, and counselors. Connecting activities might also include providing assistance to schools to integrate academic and occupational learning.
Once these program elements are in place, the pilot program will be ready to be tested. Students can begin taking classes that systematically integrate workforce learning into the curriculum.
Goal 4: Promote the highest levels of student success, student
learning and teaching excellence.
The CityWorks model and plan rests upon the college’s commitment to
reaching the highest possible levels of student learning, student success,
and teaching excellence. These are the foundation blocks for creating
an attractive and inspiring workforce program at the college. Ultimately
the CityWorks plan will be adopted and supported by faculty and students
if it can be shown to be a better alternative than the current programs.
Establishing this reputation rests on careful evaluation. The CityWorks model focuses on competency based curriculum which will require faculty to develop student outcome measures. We must evaluate and assess what students have learned, how well they utilize what they have learned, and what its relevance is to their career choices. Student satisfaction measures will also need to be established as well as satisfaction measures of employers.
To carry out this assessment a group of faculty from the pilot clusters and the Office of Research will work together to design appropriate measures. Measures should include wherever possible and appropriate, the use of the portfolio assessment approach to evaluating student work.
As student progress is monitored through the new curricula, data will be provided to our Management Information System. This data would be organized into user-friendly reports based upon what faculty need to understand about students’ progress through the program. Reports would be made available each term. In addition, the Office of Research would disseminate to all cluster faculty annual reports on all measures. Annual meetings of all cluster faculty, members of the Office of Research, the cluster partners from the employer and community based organization sector would focus on a discussion of student progress and approaches to improve student learning and success.
Goal 5: Disseminate CityWorks to other CCSF Departments and
Schools
After at least two years of testing and implementing the CityWorks
model, a dissemination phase could begin. Other occupational
clusters could begin to adapt the CityWorks model to their program and
utilize the experience of the pilot clusters to guide their work.
Cluster faculty who do not wish to wait until the pilot clusters are completed
testing their curriculum, could begin the design phase of the plan.
Some piloting could begin even before the final results are know from the
pilot clusters. The focus, however, is on a careful incremental approach
to disseminating the CityWorks model to avoid making the same mistakes
over again. The goal of the CityWorks plan is to complete the dissemination
phase within five years of the completion of the pilot programs.