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Kapi‘olani CC: A Case Study in Industry Partnerships

Kapi‘olani CC: A Case Study in Industry Partnerships. Leon Richards, Chancellor, Kapi‘olani CC, University of Hawai‘i. October 3, 2014. I. Role of Community Colleges. Our business is to assist people in changing their lives . What we do best:

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Kapi‘olani CC: A Case Study in Industry Partnerships

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  1. Kapi‘olani CC: A Case Study in Industry Partnerships Leon Richards, Chancellor, Kapi‘olani CC, University of Hawai‘i October 3, 2014

  2. I. Role of Community Colleges • Our business is to assist people in changing their lives. • What we do best: • UH has a 7 campus system located on and serving all islands of Hawai‘i • Open admission • Any time, Any place, Any where • 30,000-32,000 students in credit programs per semester • 100,000 student participants in Continuing Education and Workforce Development • Certificates and Degrees in approximately 80 different fields and areas.

  3. Typical Community College Programs • Health Care Industry (Nurses, Medical and Laboratory Technicians) • Protective Services (Firefighters, Police, Paramedics and EMTs, Cybersecurity) • Construction, Trades, Manufacturing • Laboratory Science Technicians • Engineering Technicians • Information Technology • Business, Management/Marketing/Hospitality (Hotel, Travel & Tourism, Culinary Arts) • Arts & Sciences Transfer • Agricultural Workers & Technicians • Transportation Technicians & Service

  4. Kapi`olani CC (KCC) • KCC - 45 Industry-Recognized Programs: • 22 associate degrees (two-year degree) • 23 certificates in the areas of Health, Hospitality, Culinary, Tourism, Business, IT and Arts and Sciences. • Spring 2014 approximately 8,100 studentsfrom 45 countriesand territories. • 58% of students are women; mean age 25 years • 51% of students report their ethnicity as Asian, 14% Hawaiian Pacific Islander, 13% Caucasian, 17% mixed, and 3% other. • .

  5. II. Role of Industry and Education • According to Harvard Business School 2013-2014 Survey on U.S. Competitiveness: • Need: reinvigorate this skill base of our workforce. • What: Middle-skills jobs are estimated to account for as much as 48% of all work in America. • How: companies and industries will have to articulate the skills and aptitudes required for jobs they need or will need. • Goal:Businesses work with educational institutions to develop career paths that lead to employment.

  6. GO TO 2040 Plan • Improve the quality of our labor force, GO TO 2040, Comprehensive Regional Plan recommends: • What: Coordinate employers’ needs and College role of training and education. • Goal: improve our State’s education system through partnerships • Why: “Human Capital” — having an educated, skilled workforce is more important than any other factor in creating economic prosperity.

  7. GO TO 2040 Plan • How:career pathways” as a workforce development tool. • Career pathways - develop career-laddered program sequences at CC, CA and AS degree exit points that tie to the jobs and careers in industry.

  8. III. KCC-Business/Industry Partnerships Ingredients for Success: • Program Advisory Committees – Identify Knowledge, Skills, Attitudes and needed Resources • Accreditation - Industry Standards • DACUM (Develop A Curriculum Model) – a system for mapping an industry • Career Pathways (e.g., Nursing) • Dean and faculty in direct contact with the workplace staff. • MOA's outline the skills to be practiced at the industry partner site.

  9. Kapi‘olani CC Integrated, Purposeful Academic/Career Pathways: DACUM • Develop a curriculum model to meet industry needs. • Identify the JobSkills, Knowledge and Attitudes (SKA)to be competent.

  10. Kapi‘olani CC Integrated, Purposeful Academic/Career Pathways: DACUM • Continuing Education & Training and/or Customized Contract Training Modules • Meeting immediate needs of the Workforce

  11. KCC - Nursing Career Pathway Nursing Program degree and certificates in: • ADN (Associate Degree Nursing/Registered Nurse), • LPN (Licensed Practical Nurse), • Nurse Aide, • Adult Residential Care-Home Operator, • Long Term Care (LTC) Nurse Aide • Surgical Technician

  12. KCC Nursing Pathway: Workforce Career Pathways Ladder Work in either Long Term Care facility or acute care as a Nurse Aide. Nurse Aide-Level Training Associate in Science Degree in Nursing (ADN) with a Career Ladder [NA (CC), LPN (CA), ADN (AS)] Practical Nurse-Level Training Work in hospital or community health as a LPN NCLEX-PN Exam Registered Nurse-Level Training NCLEX-RN Exam Workas RN in acute care & community health Surgical Tech Program Long Term Care (LTC) Nurse Aide Program Adult Residential Care Home Operator Program LPN to ADN Transition Program RN Preparation Program Transfer to BSN Program

  13. KCC-DOE-DOH Partnership • Training for DOE 255 School Health Aide (SHA) • SHA are currently employed with a high school diploma • NEW: Funding C3T 3 & 4 • Skill Level I – recognized for entry into job - 75 hours 6 credits • Skill Level II – work to increase salary 75 hours – 6 credits • The first 25 students will graduate on October 3rd, 2014.   • Pathways – to be developed: • Medical Assisting Program – Accredited - for those interested in physician office management • Community Health Worker Program – being revised to meet industry requirements for those wanting to work in child and adolescent health.

  14. Teaching Hospital • Leveraging Location and KCC Programs for Long-Term Care • Lē‘ahi Hospital and KCC Strategic Planning • Gerontology skills lab for Health Sciences Programs: • OTA, PTA, Respiratory Care, ESS, ADN, LPN and CAN • Culinary Kitchen to meet the inpatient and community out-patients needs.

  15. KCC-Food Industry Partnership • For Hawaii’s food industry to flourish, it requires workers highly trained in both the principles of culinary arts and food safety. • Equally important—in a state that imports over 85% of its food and is the most vulnerable state in the nation in regards to its food security—Hawaii needs to build a food manufacturing industry that utilizes and supports locally-grown ingredients. This requires a workforce that is trained in food entrepreneurship, food innovation, state-of-the-art food production technology, and HACCP food safety procedures. • KCC is working with CTAHR at UH Manoa to articulate its AS degree in Institutional Food Service Management with a BS degree in Culinology. • To ensure that Oahu has the resources to develop and grow a locally-sourced food manufacturing industry, it has plans to expand the food innovation concept first piloted by UH Maui College, and will do this through a cost-effective and integrated shared resource/technology approach. • Needed are both the infrastructure (food innovation centers) and the curriculum for a changing industry.   • Food Safety, Manufacturing, Production & Innovation

  16. KCC-Hospitality Industry Partnership • BAS in Hospitality Management • KCCʻs hospitality industry partners state that operations and management is shiftingfrom a focus on traditional customer service to one of “asset management,” as a result of new types of owners and guests—fractional ownership, timeshares, and second homes. • Thus, a new kind of hospitality management and leadership training is needed, both for incumbent workers and new students. • In response, KCC submitted an Authorization Plan with West Oahu College that would create a 3rd year Advanced Professional Certificate and a 4th year Hospitality Management Bachelor Degree.

  17. What You Can Do! • Create industry credentials for newly identified occupations • Provide salaries that make these positions sustainable as a living wage • Provide more professional development opportunities in industry for college faculty and staff • Standardize preceptor training for industry personnel across programs • Participate on College Advisory Boards • Make a one to three year commitment of resources to support College programs • Value certificates and degrees from Community Colleges via hiring and promotion decisions.

  18. Kapi‘olani CC: A Case Study in Industry Partnerships Presented byLeon Richards University of Hawai‘i, Kapi‘olani Community College lr@hawaii.edu; 808-734-9565 October 3, 2014

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