1 / 12

INDUSTRY-DRIVEN SOLUTION TO SKILLS CRISIS IN MANUFACTURING

INDUSTRY-DRIVEN SOLUTION TO SKILLS CRISIS IN MANUFACTURING. Remarks by Leo Reddy Chairman and CEO, Manufacturing Skill Standards Council NACFAM AMLF Conference April 9, Crystal City VA . Skills Gap: Can We Close It?. Permanent Feature of Competitiveness Studies, conferences

phong
Télécharger la présentation

INDUSTRY-DRIVEN SOLUTION TO SKILLS CRISIS IN MANUFACTURING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INDUSTRY-DRIVEN SOLUTION TO SKILLS CRISIS IN MANUFACTURING Remarks by Leo Reddy Chairman and CEO, Manufacturing Skill Standards Council NACFAM AMLF Conference April 9, Crystal City VA

  2. Skills Gap: Can We Close It? • Permanent Feature of Competitiveness Studies, conferences • Including top billing in NACFAM proposal • Just this year: Harvard Business School, NAM Top Priorities, MAPI/Aspen Institute

  3. Bottom Line • 600,000 job openings - for which manufacturers can not find skilled employees • Source: Deloitte/NAM-MI, 2011

  4. Most Critical Workforce Shortage: Production Workers Deloitte & NAM MI 2011

  5. ROOT CAUSE: DISCONNECT • Deep disconnect between industry demand and education supply • “Education is preparing 80% of students for 20% of the jobs” Source: Harry Moser, President, Re-shoring Initiative

  6. SOLUTION: ALIGN EDUCATION WITH NEEDS OF INDUSRY Elements of industry-driven solution: • Standards: Industry-defined, nationally validated • Instructional materials aligned with standards: courses, textbooks, e-learning, instructor training • Assessments aligned with standards: Industry-formulated test questions, delivered on-line • Credentials: Industry-recognized, nationally portable • Education Reform: Courses aligned with industry standards, students enabled to graduate with both a degree and an industry-recognized certification

  7. BUILDING THOSE ELEMENTS THROUGH PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS: A LONG PROCESS • Bush I: Industry standards • Clinton: National Skill Standards Act: - Industry Standards and Certifications - Industry-led “Voluntary Partnerships” (e.g. MSSC for Mfg.) • Bush II: - Standards-based Competencies Models (DOL) - Standards-based Career Pathways (DoED) - Linkage of training funds toindustry- recognized credentials (DOL and DoED)

  8. A LONG PROCESS – CONT’D • Obama: - Strong focus on certification, stackability- President’s June 8, 2011 goal: Credential 500,000 - Mfg. workers in 5 years under NAM System • NAM-MI: - NAM-endorsed Skills Certification System (Founding Partners: ACT, MSSC, NIMS, AWS, SME)- Education reform supported by leading foundations

  9. BREAKING NEWS! ALL BUILDING BLOCKS OF AN INDUSTRY-DRIVEN SOLUTION ARE NOW IN PLACE

  10. WHAT NEXT? NATIONWIDE CAMPAIGN TO ACCELERATE DEPLOYMENT OF INDUSTRY-RECOGNIZED, NATIONALLY PORTABLE CREDENTIALS

  11. WHO? • INDUSTRY: Require certifications; make centerpiece of recruitment policies; communicate to state governments • EDUCATION: Help students secure industry credentials thru for-credit courses • FEDERAL: Link federal workforce training funds to industry-recognized, nationally portable certifications. Pass America Works Act.

  12. WHO PAYS • Regular Education System: Students, Parents, Pell Grants, GI Bill, Tuition Reimbursement • Federal Programs: DOL/ETA, DoED/ OVAE, DoD, VA, NSF/ATE • State Programs: CTE Course emphasis, dual credit HS/CC arrangements, Workforce Investment Boards, incumbent training support programs

More Related