170 likes | 325 Views
QUALITY STANDARDS IN CAREER DEVELOPMENT SERVICES. A Canadian Snapshot and an International Perspective CDSWG Report: 2010. Outline. Background and Importance of the project What is meant by Quality Standards? Involvement and Process
E N D
QUALITY STANDARDS IN CAREER DEVELOPMENT SERVICES A Canadian Snapshot and an International Perspective CDSWG Report: 2010
Outline • Background and Importance of the project • What is meant by Quality Standards? • Involvement and Process • The Results: General Observations, Canadian Innovations & Canadian Challenges • Next steps: Possible Future Directions • Impact on Career Development
Background and Importance • Goal of CDSWG: Enhance the quality and effectiveness of CDS. • Funded a study to gather a “snapshot” of the state of practice of Quality Service Standards in Canada and internationally. • Quality Standards = Quality Services • The results would provide needed information on Quality Standards, highlight promising practices, and suggest recommendations to move the Quality Standards agenda forward in Canada.
What is meant by Quality Standards • A Quality Standard is a statement of the expected level of performance to be achieved. • Quality Standards in career and employment services may cover: • The standards set for services and some way of monitoring whether these standards are being met • The qualifications/competencies of delivery staff • The outcomes of services and a system for tracking and reporting on outcomes • Umbrella term: Quality Assurance (QA)
Involvement and Process • CANADA: A cross section of career & employment services (provincial/municipal government, government-funded, community based) • Key informant interviews • 7 provincial coordinators/3rd party coordinators • 4 third party providers • 2 community-based providers • 2 community-based umbrella organizations
Involvement and Process con’t Sample of questions for Service Standards • Is a service charter or vision in place for the organization? • Are access and /or wait times for services specified? • Are clients informed about what services are available to them? • Is a requirement in place that all clients have an action plan and identified steps to take in order to achieve their goal? • Is a system for dealing with client complaints in place? • Are times specified during which follow-up should occur?
Involvement and Process con’t • INTERNATIONAL: An overview of Quality Assurance systems • EU Quality Standards Working Group
The Results: General Observations • The Canadian key drivers pushing the QA agenda forward in Canada appear to be very similar to those cited internationally: • General trend toward introduction of QA systems across all public services • Shift in philosophy underpinning service provision (user satisfaction becoming key element in design of services) • Career development field becoming more professionalized, with stronger identity
The Results: General Observations Con’t • Canada seems to take a hybrid approach to QA (Administrative-centred, User-centred and Practitioner-led) • Common Threads: • Recognize importance of impact assessment, but current reporting limited to narrow quantitative measures • Need for collaborative development of QA systems • EU Common Reference Tools can provide very useful framework
The Results: Canadian Innovations • A priority on staff development and their work and workplace satisfaction as a necessary precursor to quality service and achievement of outcomes • A clear movement towards developing more meaningful outcome indicators • Tracking progress • Employment equivalencies • Assessing quality of work • Degree of match between supply and demand
The Results: Canadian Innovations Con’t • A weighted client input model which recognizes that achievement of successful outcome is more difficult with some clients than others • Certification of offices delivering employment services • A shift from program centered to client centered services
The Results: Canadian Challenges • Evidence/Outcome indicators are currently incomplete and inadequate – contract compliance and QA need to be differentiated qualitatively and quantitatively • Data gathering tools and systems and limited • There is almost no focus on the quality of the processes of services (What does “good” service consist of?)
The Results: Canadian Challenges Con’t • There is secrecy about QA standards • The use of the Canadian S & Gs as a tool for consistency of service is growing, but still needs to expand • There is still an imbalance in emphasis in the importance accorded to the 3 dimensions of QA – service, practitioner and outcomes.
Next Steps: Suggested Directions • Create a mechanism whereby promising Canadian QA approaches, tools and results can be shared – possible partners include CRWG, CCCDA, ICCDPP • Commission a study to give the Canadian public a voice in assessing and influencing career & employment services
Next Steps: Suggested Directions Con’t • Make building the evidence base for career & employment services a high priority through supporting research, on-line data gathering tools for common indicators • Promote models, approaches and research which demonstrate a holistic, balanced approach to QA (Balancing Service Delivery, Practitioner and Outcomes Standards)
Impact on Career Development • Movement in the last years towards “proving” that CDS work. Effective QA processes are an essential part of the equation to providing that proof. • QA approaches produce evidence, which in turn may be used as the basis for policy decisions (decisions made on gathered information and structured feedback)
Contact Information • For full report and additional questions: Forum of Labour Market Ministers Heather Collier Director Ph. 780-427-3975 Fax. 780-427-0354 Email. Heather.collier@gov.ab.ca • Carol Forster • Senior Policy Analyst • Ph. 780-427-4741 • Fax. 780-427-0354 • Email. Carol.forster@gov.ab.ca