ACE

CenterPoint

August/September 2009 Subscribe

Featured In This Issue...

image

 

STEM Education Targets Adults To Drive National Innovation
Higher education initiatives target adults to build up the nation's STEM workforce. Read more.

In Brief...

image

 

States Look Beyond Academic Degrees to Meet Workforce Needs
Recent high school and college graduates may find that they need another credential to get a job: a Career Readiness Certificate (CRC). Deployed in 23 states thus far, the CRC is an assessment-based credential that evaluates professional competencies as opposed to academic knowledge. Higher education institutions and employers increasingly are using the portable credential to promote workforce development initiatives in high-demand industries at local and statewide levels. The National Association of Manufacturers is using ACT's National Career Readiness Certificate system, essentially the same as a CRC, to provide career pathways in the manufacturing industry and connect workers to postsecondary education. The American Association of Community Colleges has endorsed the National Career Readiness Credential and is using it as a screening and diagnostic tool for incoming students as well as an enhancement to existing credentials in career and technical programs. An implementation guide for CRCs has been developed by the National Organization for Career Credentialing, which developed the original credential model in Virginia in 2004.

For more articles on higher education & workforce development, visit the CenterPoint Archives.

 
image

 

Online Education Hits Home for Adult Workers
Online education and training programs for low-wage, low-skill workers aim to bridge the digital and postsecondary educational divide for historically disadvantaged groups. A recent report by the Rutgers Center for Women and Work highlights several successful online programs to help working adults get postsecondary credentials and degrees. In New Jersey, an online educational pilot program for single, working mothers—centralized through the Career One-Stop system—increased annual wages for participants by an average of 14 percent and helped 15 women advance to postsecondary education. In Texas, the Workforce Solutions Online Learning Community is a pilot program that helped 84 percent of participants earn higher wages and stop receiving public assistance. Both programs used an in-home learning system that provides computers and access to individualized online training for participants. Other states in the report with online educational initiatives targeting low-income adults include Massachusetts, Georgia, Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Maine, Michigan, South Carolina, and Pennsylvania.

For more promising practices in online education for adult learners, visit First Stop, ACE's online clearinghouse for lifelong learning policies and practices.

 

Missed an issue? Visit the CenterPoint Archives for previous articles on lifelong learning and higher education.

Subscribe to CenterPoint for free!

 

Please direct questions about this page to:
CenterPointEditor@ace.nche.edu
This page last updated on 09/16/2009