460 likes | 604 Views
Restoring the Economy by Building America’s Workforce Dr. Tony Zeiss. What Drives the Economy? II. Economic Recovery III. Workforce Trends IV. A Call for Action. Wake Up Call. # 1 Threat To The Economy. Lack of Skilled & Productive Workers Alan Greenspan.
E N D
Restoring the Economy by Building America’s WorkforceDr. Tony Zeiss
What Drives the Economy?II. Economic RecoveryIII. Workforce TrendsIV. A Call for Action
# 1 Threat To The Economy Lack of Skilled & Productive Workers Alan Greenspan
# 1 Threat To Your State(Your Community) Lack of Skilled & Productive Workers
“America is facing the greatest labor & skills shortagein its history!”
Hard Facts • 10 million worker shortage in 2011. • U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics • A crisis in finding skilled labor. • National Association of Manufactures; Senator Tom Harken • Health care providers & public schools are desperate for skilled labor~ -Get’em While They’re Hot Dr. Tony Zeiss
Hard Facts • Baby boomers are retiring. • Succeeding generations are smaller. • Low skilled jobs are becoming obsolete or moving offshore. • Higher skilled jobs are replacing lower skilled jobs. • America’s talent pool is decreasing; China’s & India’s are increasing. • Evolving leadership gap.~
Projected Growth in Supply and Demand of Workers With Some Postsecondary Education, 1998 to 2028. Education Required Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Census Bureau and National Alliance of Business
Hard Facts • U. S. is losing manufacturing jobs. • 80% of creativity & innovation. • We must continue to be creative & innovative. • Jobs of the Future require higher skills & knowledge. • 40% to 60% of jobs in 2015 don’t exist~
Good News • Those organizations that prepare for the labor & skill shortage will do well! • Providing a reliable supply chain of skilled workers is critical (and can be done). • Most workers are prepared by community & technical colleges.
Good News • Most outsourced corporate education is provided by community colleges. • Community Colleges are driving much of the economy (A great source of skilled employees; very responsive).~
Our Challenge Meeting Citizen and Employer Needs of the 21st Century
I. What Drives the Economy? People and their Ability to Produce!
Economic Powers Will Be Those Who… • Compete well. • Produce well. • Use info & info networks well. • Educate well. • Produce skilled workers.~
Colleges Now Serve… • Emerging Workers • Existing Workers • Entrepreneurial Workers • Transitional Workers • Avocational Workers~
The Value of LifelongTraining KNOWLEDGE = KEY STRATEGIC RESOURCE LEARNING = KEY STRATEGIC ACTIVITY
The Value of Lifelong Training 40 – 60% of the jobs in 2015 haven’t been invented yet.
Job Requirements in 2005 25% BS OR HIGHER 70% 1 OR 2 YEARS 5% HIGH SCHOOL OR BELOW SOURCE: US DEPT. OF LABOR
Note: 83% of Associate Degree holders have same or higher earnings as Four Year Degree holders. -Other Ways to Win Gray & Herr
II. Economic Recovery • Job Attraction • Job Expansion • Job Creation • Job Retention All Depend upon Skilled Workers
101M Adult Learners in U.S. • 33.5M Degrees of All Kinds • 4.4M Basic Skills • 45.6M Occupational Skills • 45.6M Personal Enrichment~ Source: NCES, Condition of Ed., 2000
Training and Re-Training Stimulates Job Growth and Economic Recovery
III. Workforce Trends • 6%+ Unemployment • Availability of low-skilled workers is rising. • Need for low-skilled workers is decreasing. • Need for professional workers is increasing. • Need for technical skilled workers is increasing. • Cross training is standard ~
Key Employee Group Needs • Health professionals – 25% Growth, 2016 • Teachers • Professional & Business Services – Employment Services • Managers in all fields • IT professionals with specific certifications: Desktop Publishing, JAVA, Cisco, Database Mgt., Security Certifications~
10 Best Jobs Requiring Two-Year Degrees • Computer Specialist • Dental Hygienists • Fashion Designers • Registered Nurses • Environmental Engineering Technicians • Radiologic Technologists & Technicians • Industrial Engineering Technicians • Paralegals & Legal Assistants • Occupational Therapists Assistants • Computer Support Specialists Source: Careerbuilder.com
High Growth Occupations Source: DOL Bureau of Labor Statistics 2008
Occupations with a Decrease in Employment Source: DOL Bureau of Labor Statistics 2008
National Trends • Employers care about performance. • Degrees are less revered. • Professional Certification desired. • Public education isn’t responsive or very accountable.~
Employer Concerns • Curriculum - life skills, workplace skills. • Nine of 10 mfg. companies cannot find skilled workers. • Shortage of workers in health care, education, & professional services. • 50 – 60% of workers have basic skills needs.~
Student Concerns • From Candidates to Consumers • Responsive Educational Services with Relevance (Certifications) • Convenience and Comprehensive • Encouragement~
IV. A Call For ActionCommunity Colleges Are Uniquely Suited • Accessible • Affordable • Customer focused • Market sensitive • Accountable~
Why People Attend Community Colleges Age: 16-30 31+ Transfer 32% 14.5% Improve Skills 62.5% 83.5% Other 5.5% 2% Source: AACC Journal, Baker, Apr., 1998
Why People Withdraw from Community Colleges Age: 16-30 31+ Lack of Program Info 5.4 4.8 Child Care 5.5 6.2 Work 12.5 23.1 Lack of Interest 17.6 9.7 Inconvenient Classes 18.4 25.4 Financial 40.6 31.2 ~
New Challenges • Preserving our relevance. • Adjusting to market needs-occupational skills credentialing. • Serving emerging, existing, transitional, and entrepreneurial workers. • Collaborating with government, business, community, and other educational organizations.~
Community College Paradigm Shift FROMTo Available Convenient Teaching Learning Traditional Flexible Supported Self Assisted Insulated Community Based Self Focused Customer Focused~
Personal Leadership Pathway Nine Laws for Becoming Influential 9. Law of Learning 8. Law of Self Confidence 7. Law of Organization 6. Law of Results 5. Law of Problem Solving 4. Law of Team Work 3. Law of Work Ethic 2. Law of communication
Personal Leadership Pathway Four Power Principles 1. Vision 2. Thought 3. Influence 4. Reciprocity Source: Build Your Own Ladder Dr. Tony Zeiss
The CPCC Story • Spring 1993 15% of Students & Losing Money • Fall 1993 New Master Plan & Vision • Spring 2002 U. S. Government Distinction • Spring 2003 Community College of the Year • Fall 2008 40% of Students, $4M+
Corporate & Continuing Education Models 1. Separated 2. Integrated
Benefits To the College • Fulfilling Vision & Mission • Financial • Closer Business & Community Partnerships • Policy Makers LIKE IT! • Entrepreneurial Culture~