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Welcome. JANUARY 2013. Agenda. 10 JANUARY 2013. Project Overview What we set out to do Setting Standards The approach The Standards, Profiles The outcome Using Standards Examples on how they are used. PART 1. PART 2. Child Care Human Resources Sector Council.

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  1. Welcome JANUARY 2013

  2. Agenda 10 JANUARY 2013 Project Overview What we set out to do Setting Standards The approach The Standards, Profiles The outcome Using Standards Examples on how they are used PART 1 PART 2

  3. Child Care Human Resources Sector Council Addresses human resource issues through: Resources Research Collective Approach Strategies

  4. Child Care Human Resources Sector Council Works with: EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATORS GOVERNMENT NATIONAL/ PROVINCIAL CHILD CARE AND LABOUR ORGANIZATIONS EMPLOYERS, ADMINISTRATORS POST-SECONDARY EDUCATION

  5. National Occupational Standards and Profiles K KNOWLEGE S SKILLS A ATTITUDES

  6. Let’s Talk Please take a couple of minutes to discuss: Have you used National Occupational Standards? If so, how? What other resources do you consult to determine the knowledge, skills, and attitudes required of Early Childhood Educators and Child Care Administrators?

  7. NOS or Profile Format Occupational Domain MAJOR SECTIONS (Key competencies) Embodiment of domain RELATED TASKS General knowledge and performance requirements Knowledge of... Ability to... Statement Statement SUBTASKS Explicit details of the skills CONTEXT RATINGS Statement Statement !

  8. Child Care Administrator National Occupational Standards Contextual Information IMPORTANCE/ CRITICALITY FREQUENCY TIME TO BECOME PROFICIENT

  9. Standards Serve Many Stakeholders and Markets HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PRACTITIONERS PRACTITIONERS Child Care Administrators, Early Childhood Educators EDUCATORS Training program developers and providers POLICY & ADVOCACY GROUPS Associations Governments CAREER GUIDANCE PRACTITIONERS EMPLOYERS & ORGANIZED LABOUR

  10. Standards Inform Practice IMPROVED PRACTICE: QUALITY AND COMPETITIVE SERVICE, SAFETY, SECURITY RECOGNITION OF COMPETENCE: SECTOR EXPERTISE, CREDENTIALS, REGULATION RESEARCH, KNOWLEDGE HUMAN RESOURCE PRACTICES: RECRUITMENT, SELECTION, PERFORMANCE REVIEWS, JOB DESCRIPTIONS IMPROVE CAREER IMAGE, GUIDANCE: ATTRACTION, DEVELOPMENT, CAREER PATH ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT/ CHANGE MANAGEMENT: JOB DESIGN, SUCCESSION PLANNING, STRATEGIC PLANNING CURRICULUM, EDUCATION AND TRAINING PROGRAMS LABOUR/WORKER MOBILITY & ANALYSIS: ARTICULATION, CREDIT TRANSFER

  11. Standards Inform Practice HUMAN RESOURCE PRACTICES IMPROVED PRACTICE: QUALITY AND COMPETITIVE SERVICE, SAFETY, SECURITY RECOGNITION OF COMPETENCE: INDUSTRY EXPERTISE, CREDENTIALS, REGULATION Job Advertisements Selection / Interview Criteria Job Descriptions RESEARCH, KNOWLEDGE HUMAN RESOURCE PRACTICES: RECRUITMENT, SELECTION, PERFORMANCE REVIEWS, JOB DESCRIPTIONS IMPROVE CAREER IMAGE, GUIDANCE: ATTRACTION, DEVELOPMENT, CAREER PATH Orientation Plan Performance Review Individual Learning Plan ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT/ CHANGE MANAGEMENT: JOB DESIGN, SUCCESSION PLANNING, STRATEGIC PLANNING Career Path, Work Transition Succession Planning Rewards/ Recognition Programs CURRICULUM, EDUCATION AND TRAINING PROGRAMS LABOUR/WORKER MOBILITY & ANALYSIS: ARTICULATION, CREDIT TRANSFER

  12. Standards Inform Practice CURRICULUM, EDUCATION AND TRAINING PROGRAMS Educators can use standards to: Develop progressive curriculum that reflects level of workplace responsibility Identify relevant and current content areas for programs and courses Develop learning and assessment activities that reflect the level of competency expected in the workplace Compare existing programs and courses to standards Identify common core curriculum to facilitate learner mobility Translate standards into program learning outcomesin a consistent manner

  13. FLEXIBLE ACCESSIBLE, EQUITABLE, AND FAIR VOLUNTARY FEASIBILITY AND SUSTAINABILITY COHERENCE AND RIGOUR REPRESENTATIVE Principles CONSENSUS OPENNESS AND TRANSPARENCY CURRENT, RELEVANT, AND VALID IMPARTIALITY AND INDEPENDENCE HARMONIZATION CONFIDENTIALITY

  14. OCCUPATIONAL STANDARDS Stakeholders PROJECT ADVISORY TECHNICAL INPUT SUBJECT MATTER EXPERTS Job incumbents considered expert in their field Specialists in certain content or context matters (supervisors, educators, elders) POLICY AND DECISION MAKERS Administrators Program decision makers Legal ANALYST PROJECT MANAGER Quality, program integrity Compliance with program standards Program viability, sustainability Meeting obligations: sanction work plan Facilitate and deliver on project requirements Administration Inform and validate content

  15. NATIONAL OCCUPATIONAL STANDARDS Quality Development Approach STAGE 1 Norm Referencing, Data Collection STAGE STAGE 2 6 Stakeholder Consultation, Profiling Edit, Translate, Publish STAGE STAGE 3 5 Secondary, Corroborating Research Ratification STAGE 4 Validation

  16. STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE 1 3 4 6 2 5 NORM REFERENCING, DATA COLLECTION WHAT Compiled comparative report of relevant, current, exemplar norms, to serve as a benchmark: defines what is recognized as current practice Norms are any form of a standard or documented processes, procedures, policies… the de facto practices recognized by stakeholders as ‘relevant, current, exemplar’ NORMS? Curriculum Company policies or operating manuals Regulations Occupational standards Training manuals Job descriptions Authentic workplace documents • WHY • Helps define the scope • Helps identify emergent practice • Helps identify possible partnerships, critical stakeholders

  17. Defining the ‘Scope’ Benchmark? FULLY QUALIFIED ENTRY COMPETENCY IN OCCUPATION ESSENTIAL SKILLS, EMPLOYABILITY SKILLS Domain? OCCUPATION/FIELD OF PRACTICE EXTENDED SPECIALTY FAMILY OR CLUSTER Projection? Current practice Emergent practice Pan-Canadian International Sector-based Sponsor-specific

  18. Norm Referencing Data informs Scope • Linked to: • Objectives • Structure • Specificity • EXAMPLE • What are the objectives/ uses for the standard? • Who are the key stakeholders? • What should all the major categories be? • What are the necessary related skills for each category? • And the subskills? • And how much detail and context is needed?

  19. CERTIFICATION PROGRAMS, POLICY WORKER MOBILITY Information to support measurement of people TRAINING PROGRAMS CURRICULUM DESIGN QUALIFICATION FRAMEWORKS ARTICULATION Information specific to an occupation or profession; program objectives • HR PRACTICES, e.g. • JOB DESCRIPTIONS • TRAINING PLANS • SELECTION CRITERIA • ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT Information specific to one job context CAREER INFO/ CAREER PATHING JOB ADVERTISEMENTS General descriptions Specificity, Contextual Information Getting the Right Amount of Detail, Context

  20. STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE 1 3 4 6 2 5 STAKEHOLDER CONSULTATION, PROFILING ACTIVITIES WHAT Getting input and opinion from subject matter experts • WHY • Inform content and scope SMEs? ‘High performing, experienced’ job incumbents Academics or researchers specializing in the field Specialists associated with part of the domain Policy specialists • HOW • Facilitated group sessions (in person) • Surveys • Structured interviews • Direct observation

  21. STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE 1 3 4 6 2 5 SECONDARY, CORROBORATING RESEARCH WHAT Getting further information/data from qualified sources to address gaps • WHY • Ensuring data collected from existing sources is accurate, • complete • Obtaining additional data to address areas where there is a • need, e.g. deficiencies • HOW • Literature review • Structured interviews

  22. STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE 1 3 4 6 2 5 VALIDATION WHAT Quality assurance process to verify content integrity involving broad, representative SME consultation • WHY • Verify content integrity • Establish confidence (trust) in content; get buy in • HOW • Facilitated consultation with SMEs, e.g. review meeting, • on-line surveys • Secondary research, e.g. check sources

  23. 1 BASIC CONVENTIONS  • Complete • Accurate • Appropriate specificity • Clarity, lack of ambiguity • Void of complex rhetoric, • jargon • Measurable, attainable • Void of redundancy • Harmony, agreement, • concordance, consistency • Focused on objective • Free of inherent bias; • politically neutral • Appropriate scope of domain   Validation Stages  Evidence of Application & Program Objectives  Content & Scope Integrity  ACCOUNTABILITY AND INFLUENCE MEASURES   QUALITATIVE REQUIREMENTS  BASIC CONVENTIONS  1 2 3  Validation Framework

  24. 2 QUALITATIVE REQUIREMENTS  • Verification of appropriate data • sources and collection • methods (primary, secondary) • Appropriate projection e.g. • current versus future/ • aspirational • Appropriate Level/ Benchmark • Cross-validation with related • skills index, e.g. • Occupational Language • Analysis • Essential Skills Profile • Regulations • Qualified norm references  Validation Stages Evidence of Application & Program Objectives  Content & Scope Integrity  ACCOUNTABILITY AND INFLUENCE MEASURES QUALITATIVE REQUIREMENTS BASIC CONVENTIONS 1 2 3 Validation Framework

  25. STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE 1 3 4 6 2 5 RATIFICATION WHAT Advisory committee (policy and decision makers) verify due process (quality standards) followed • WHY • Verification and sign off that objectives met, due • process followed, i.e. compliance with quality • standards • Mechanism for endorsement of the standard • Due Process? • Agreed-upon principles (12) followed, e.g. • representation achieved • consensus approach used • Validation (content and scope integrity) achieved, e.g. • verification that qualified • data sources used • basic conventions met • HOW • Sign-off form

  26. STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE STAGE 1 3 6 2 4 5 EDIT, TRANSLATE, PUBLISH WHAT Substantive edit, adaptation to second official language, and design work to achieved publish-ready document • WHY • Prepare for launch/broadcast • AND… • Identification of opportunities: • programs, products, services • markets, key accounts… • Promotion and marketing considerations • Fulfilment requirements: storefront et al

  27. Child Care Administrator National Occupational Standards Child Care Development & Care Collaborate with Others Human Resources Financial Management Prepare budget Manage revenues and expenditures Hire staff Manage staff Collaborate with others Develop and implement children’s programs Protect and respect the rights of children Operations Health and Safety Leadership Communi- cations Use communications skills Provide leadership Create a safe and healthy environment Oversee nutrition program Oversee security and emergency response Manage legal requirements Participate in planning activities Manage administration Manage equipment and facilities 8 Sections 16 Tasks 68 Subtasks

  28. Child Care Administrator Child Care Development & Care Collaborate with Others Human Resources Financial Management Prepare budget Manage revenues and expenditures Hire staff Manage staff Collaborate with others Develop and implement children’s programs Protect and respect the rights of children 1.1 Implement a Philosophy of Early Childhood Education and Care 1.2 Implement a Curriculum 1.4 Provide Programming Supports to Staff 1.5 Evaluate Programs 1.3 Provide a Child-Centred Learning Environment Operations Health and Safety Leadership Communi- cations Use communications skills Provide leadership Create a safe and healthy environment Oversee nutrition program Oversee security and emergency response Manage legal requirements Participate in planning activities Manage administration Manage equipment and facilities

  29. Child Care Administrator Child Care Development & Care • Required core knowledge: • Child care administrators know: • benefits of routines, transitions, planned activities, curriculum and appropriate equipment and materials • importance of: • - individualizes learning for each child • - meeting emotional needs of each child • - long periods of uninterrupted play learning • - family within the environment - respect for diversity of children and families • - staff’s role in enhancing children’s learning • - facility design and layout • - appropriate materials and equipment • - the outdoors and how it contributes to children’s • mental and physical health • legal requirements for indoor and outdoor areas of child care centres • Required skills and abilities: • Child care administrators are able to: • Ensure a caring and nurturing environment for all children • Maintain relationships with families, staff and children • Ensure staff understand their roles, for example, to: • Promote philosophy and core values of organization • Work as a team member... • Monitor the day-to-day activities in the organization: • Observe interactions in the learning environment • Document children’s learning • Create an environment of collaboration: • Help staff and families assess needs of child • Make suggestions for improvement... • Ensure facility and outdoor areas comply with legislative requirements Develop and implement children’s programs 1.1 Implement a Philosophy of Early Childhood Education and Care 1.2 Implement a Curriculum 1.4 Provide Programming Supports to Staff 1.5 Evaluate Programs 1.3 Provide a Child-Centred Learning Environment K P

  30. Additional Highlights Child Care Administrator National Occupational Standards FAMILY and COMMUNITY involvement key in the research and development REORGANIZED with a focus on categorizing of skills PLAIN LANGUAGE and avoidance of redundancy Emphasis on LEADERSHIP and MANAGEMENT Added focus on BUSINESS PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT FLEXIBLE, ADAPTABLE: represents a field of practice Benchmarked against recognized practices Added rich level of CONTEXT and SPECIFICITY

  31. Additional Highlights Child Care Development & Care Child Care Administrator Collaborate with Others National Occupational Standards Human Resources = job role of the Child Care Administrator at sample facility FAMILY and COMMUNITY involvement key in the research and development REORGANIZED with a focus on categorizing of skills PLAIN LANGUAGE and avoidance of redundancy Emphasis on LEADERSHIP and MANAGEMENT Financial Management Operations Health and Safety Added focus on BUSINESS PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT FLEXIBLE, ADAPTABLE: represents a field of practice Benchmarked against recognized practices Added rich level of CONTEXT and SPECIFICITY Leadership Communi- cations

  32. +Profiles 7 major tasks 18 sub-tasks 9 major tasks 29 sub-tasks Infant School Age Facilitate the development and behaviour of children Develop, implement and evaluate programs Support the holistic development of children Meet health, safety and well-being needs Meet nutritional needs Guide children’s behaviour Develop and maintain a safe environment Use digital technology Collaborate with schools Facilitate the development and behaviour of infants Develop, implement and evaluate programs Support the holistic development of infants Meet health, safety and well-being needs Meet nutritional needs Operate and maintain facilities Advocate for the profession

  33. Title Here and Here Title Here and Here Title Here and Here Title Here and Here Title Here and Here Working with the Standards Job Descriptions Certification Program Performance Appraisals Prior Learning Assessment Learning Outcomes 1 2 3 4 5

  34. Learning Outcomes, Curriculum And the Link to Learning Taxonomies... • How have you created learning outcomes for your courses in the past? What are they based on? • Based on your past experience how would a document like the National Occupational Standard assist you with creating learning outcomes? 1

  35. Learning Outcomes, Curriculum And the Link to Learning Taxonomies... Learning taxonomies help educators make decisions about how their students will learn, and how that learning can be assessed Learning outcomes should be clear which levels of accomplishment are envisaged for the learner 1

  36. 1

  37. Adapted Blooms Framework KNOWLEGE SKILLS/PERFORMANCE Remembering Awareness K1 S1 Understanding Readiness K2 S2 Applying Basic Proficiency K3 S3 Analysing Professional Proficiency K4 S4 Evaluating Adaptable Proficiency K5 S5 Creating Creative Proficiency K6 S6

  38. Applying the Occupational Standard to Inform Learning Outcomes, Curriculum How much? What level? What tasks should be performed to be competent? How does the existing program compare to the workplace requirements? How does the program compare to other programs (training, certification)? How does the existing program compare to the workplace requirements? How does the program compare to other programs (training, certification)? How much? What level? What tasks should be performed to be competent?

  39. Learning Outcomes • ACTION VERB : How • MEASURABLE OUTCOME : What • and sometimes • CONDITIONS : Why, or What Comprehensible Appropriate Attainable 5/6 • Possible Learning Outcome: • By the end of this course participants will be able to: • Construct policies and procedures for emergency situations • Learning Objectives Supporting the learning outcome: • By the end of this course participants will be able to: • Develop emergency policies and preparation • Identify possible community partners for assistance in emergency situations • Develop an emergency response plan • Develop an emergency communication plan • Develop a reporting and recording process Task 14: Oversee Security and Emergency Response 14.1 implement security measures 14.2 prepare for emergency situations 14.3 respond to incidents and emergencies

  40. Using standards to design curriculum and develop learning outcomes Exercise LEARNING OUTCOME Using a skill statement from the standards, write a learning outcome that would be at an appropriate level for your course or program. Indicate the taxonomic level for knowledge and/or performance. 1 LEARNING ACTIVITIES, LEARNER ASSESSMENT Discuss activities that you could use that would help students learn this skill Discuss how you would assess the skill so that students are able to demonstrate achievement of the outcome and competence against the standard

  41. Mapping Course OutcomesAgainst Occupational Standards: A gap analysis tool Broader Content Area, Higher Level Narrower Content Area, Lower Level No Comparable Areas Same Content Area, Higher Level Equivalent Broader Content Area, Lower Level Narrower Content Area, Similar Level Narrower Content Area, Higher Level Similar Content Area, Broader Scope Same Content Area, Lower Level HIGH LOW LEVEL NARROW BROAD SCOPE

  42. Using standards to design curriculum and develop learning outcomes Exercise • DEBRIEF • What evidence would you look for that your learners have achieved this outcome? • How can the standards help you determine this? • Is there an opportunity for workplace practice and assessment? • How would you conduct the assessment of this competency/learning outcome, again considering the context of your program and the learners you are working with? 1 Return Summary

  43. Performance Appraisals • What constitutes a good quality performance appraisal process? • What needs to be measured and how? Is it valid and reliable? • Why is it important to do performance appraisals? • What performance appraisal tools do you currently use in your workplace? • How were these tools developed? What are they based on? 2

  44. Performance Appraisals EXCEEDS/MEETS STANDARDS DEVELOPING PERFORMER SOLID PERFORMER DOES NOT APPLY UNSATISFACTORY IMPROVEMENT REQ’D HUMAN RESOURCES HIRE STAFF according to standard: 4.1 Determine staff needs 4.2 Recruit staff 4.3 Interview prospective staff 4.4 Screen prospective staff 4.5 Offer best position to best candidate 4.6 Provide orientation to new staff NOTES: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN:       2

  45. Using standards to develop workplace assessment materials and training plans Exercise Four key steps in conducting a performance appraisal: 2 Select Method Develop Forms Prepare for Interview Conduct Review

  46. 2

  47. Using standards to develop workplace assessment materials and training plans Exercise 2 DEBRIEF • After going through this process would you consider this an objective and fair method of assessment? • How are performance appraisals, like this one, useful for both the supervisor and the employee? Return Summary

  48. Job Descriptions/Job Ad • What is the purpose of job description? • Who has experience writing a job description? • How would you determine which skills were needed, or might be needed? • For employees, how would you determine which skills you need to advance in your career? 3

  49. Job Descriptions HUMAN RESOURCES HIRE STAFF according to standard: 4.1 Determine staff needs 4.2 Recruit staff 4.3 Interview prospective staff 4.4 Screen prospective staff 4.5 Offer best position to best candidate 4.6 Provide orientation to new staff 3

  50. Job Descriptions/Job Ad • Job title • Conditions of employment (permanent, full time, etc) • Salary / Wage (annual / hourly) • Start date • Location of employment • Education required • Experience • Languages (spoken, read, written) • Work settings (e.g. not-for-profit, indoor/outdoor) • Business equipment/tools to be used • Technical knowledge • Areas of specialization within the occupation • Any other specific skills • Security and safety requirements • Transportation • Work conditions and physical capabilities       3   

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