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Georgia Work Ready Initiative. Jo Ann Berry Deputy Director, External Affairs September 9, 2011. Governor’s vision.
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Georgia Work Ready Initiative Jo Ann Berry Deputy Director, External Affairs September 9, 2011
Governor’s vision We need a workforce development system that links workforce development andeducation together and aligns to the economic needs of the state, its regions and local communities” - Governor Sonny Perdue Feb. 20, 2006
Governance • Workforce Investment Act of 1998 • HB 1195 signed into law 2010 (SWIB) • Executive Order dated February 2, 2006
GOWD Organizational Chart Core: Job Seekers & WRC
Establish local partnerships… • County based teams • Local leaders – county and municipal • Technical College and Adult Education • Local School Board(s) • Local Workforce Investment Boards • GDOL regional reps • Chamber of Commerce • GDEcD representative • Local businesses • High School Graduation Coaches • Others
How communities earn certification • Specified percent of county residents successfully attain Work Ready Certification (S-3%/25%)(M-2%/20%)(L-1%/15%) (XL-.5%/5%) • percentage of existing workforce (private/gov.) • percentage of available workforce (C, U, GED, HS) • Public high school graduation rate increase • Determine how many additional students must graduate each year to achieve goal for the community • Target at-risk students who, with intervention, will be able to graduate • Use high school graduation coaches to identify these students and support them • Demonstrate county-wide commitment to earning certification
How to accomplish goals • CWRC teams hold community meetings • GOWD conducts monthly conference calls and quarterly face to face meetings • Sharing of best practices • Assign responsibility and hold team members accountable • Celebrate county milestones and talk about success in order to build support
Certified Work Ready Communities 104 CWRCs 4 RCWRCs 7 HSGR 45 In-Progress 3 NP
Work Ready Regions • Regional industry-clusters to develop Georgia’s talent pools aligned to strategic industry • Build upon Certified Work Ready Communities • Economic asset mapping to determine actual regions (22) • # companies • Commuting pattern • Assets (colleges w/ training, innovation centers
Identifying Critical Workforce Needs: The Work Ready Certificate (NCRC)
SKILL AREAS Reading for Information Applied Mathematics Locating Information Applied Technology Teamwork Observation Listening Writing Business Writing ** 85% of ALL occupations utilize these skills
Georgia Work Ready Certificate • Three assessments • Applied mathematics • Reading for information • Locating information • Issue Certificate based on lowest level earned Certificate WorkKeys Scores Platinum 6s and above Gold 5s and above Silver 4s and above Bronze 3s and above
Work Ready Certificate • More than 240,000 Work Ready Certificates earned • Show of skills • Work Habits (Talent) available at assessment centers Goal: 100,000 Georgians earn a Work Ready Certificate every year
GWR job profiles • A job analysis tool developed by ACT that helps employers understand what skills are required for a specific position (critical need) • Profiling sessions rely on job incumbents as subject matter experts (SMEs) • A final report to management contains complete task analysis information and skill recommendations
Matching WRC to job requirements • Customized job profile helps employers use Work Ready assessment and certificate information to match employees with positions based on foundational skill requirements • Sample certificate levels: • Aircraft structure assemblers, precision – Gold • Home health aides – Bronze • Pharmacy technician – Gold • Truck driver – Silver • Companies throughout Georgia have profiled more than 341 jobs and many more are in the pipeline
How job profiles help the bottom line • When used as an HR tool in tandem with Work Ready Assessments, employers report that a job profile can: • Reduce cost to hire and time to hire • Improve training time and cost • Reduce employee turnover • Increase productivity and reduces waste • In addition to pre-screening and hiring, many employers use job profiles to develop and promote their existing workforce and for: • Allocating internal training budgets • Hourly worker succession planning
Service delivery The Technical College System of Georgia supports Work Ready via their economic development offices. The technical colleges administer assessments, provide gap training and offer job profiling services
Common language Job Seekers Business Education Work Ready Certificate can become a common language between business and education Mutual understanding of workforce needs through communication!
USG Questions • WR impact on Georgia employment:
Vision for Work Ready • Continuation of original vision • Added initiatives • Soft Skills • New director – direction TBD – the past? • Technical certificate – technical college • USG involvement potential • ideas on how? • Two-year USG institutions ≠ technical colleges • WR potential
Benefits to Job Seekers • Showcase level of applied skill to employers. • A supplement/ enhancement for tools already at job seekers’ disposal. • Interviews, work history, resumes, references, etc. • Through Skills Gap training, level of applied skill can be improved.
Skills gap training – targets for instruction Reflects the skills required according to the job profile Reflects the job seeker’s certification level Gap analysis shows how the person performed relativetothe “bar.”
Work Ready was developed to make Georgia’s workforce our number one competitive advantage to support and grow existing industry and to attract new industry
Questions? • Contact Jo Ann Berry at jaberry@georgia.gov or 404-463-8510 • Direct companies to our website: http://www.gaworkready.org Please help us get the word out about Georgia Work Ready among businesses in your community!