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Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr, Director Basic Education for Adults State Board for Community and Technical Colleges

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Page 1: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

Pathways to College & Careersfor

Washington’s Emerging Workforce

Accelerated Pathways, Increased OpportunitiesWIOA Transition

CBS Fall 2015Jon M. Kerr, DirectorBasic Education for AdultsState Board for Community and Technical Colleges

Page 2: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

A NATIONAL CRISIS93 million adults with basic or below basic literacy

13% of adults ages 25-64 have less than a high school credential29% have a high school credential but no collegeBy 2018, only 36 percent of total jobs will require workers with

just a high school diploma or less

Postsecondary credentials are the gateway to family-supporting wages that are critical to breaking the intergenerational transmission of poverty in America.

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Page 3: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

GOVERNOR INSLEE’S EDUCATIONAL GOALS

FOR BASIC EDUCATION FOR ADULTS

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• By 2023 all adults ages 25-44 in Washington State will have a high school diploma or equivalent

• By 2017 increase the percentage of ABE and ELA students who transition to precollege or college level within two years from 12% to 15%

• By 2023 increase the percentage of the population enrolled in certificate, credential, apprenticeship and degree programs from 13% in 2012 to 24.8%

Page 4: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

WASHINGTON STATE’SWORKFORCE NEEDS

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• Washington’s needs for trained employees with college credentials will increase by almost 60% by 2030

• In that same period the population will grow by only 10%

• By 2016 nearly ¾ of available jobs will require at least a postsecondary credential

• Over the next 20 years there won’t be enough high school graduates to fill the gap

Washington will need to fill the gap with out of school youth and working age adults!

Page 5: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

General UpdatesFall 2015

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Page 6: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

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APPROVED SEPT 2015

WACTC ALLOCATION MODEL RECOMMENDATIONSSTATE FUNDS

• Determines College/District Base Enrollment Allocations (enrollment targets adjusted annually based on the comparison of the 3-year average of actual enrollments to the 3-year average target)

• Determines Minimum Operating Allocation (MOA) $2.85 Million/Campus/District

• Allocates 5% Performance Share for SAI

• Weights Priority Enrollments (30%) All BEdA enrollments All applied baccalaureate programs STEM courses designed for STEM majors or transfers Workforce high demand courses identified as contributing to

degrees needed to meet skills gaps identified in the Joint Study on A Skilled and Educated Workforce

Page 7: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

ABILITY TO BENEFIT UPDATE

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David Bartnicki, DOL-Federal Student Aid confirmed that Academic I-BEST is eligible as a career pathway under Ability to Benefit as long as students are co-enrolled in basic skills and have the goal of a transfer degree.

Page 8: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

WIOA Updates

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Page 9: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

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The term ‘adult education’ means academic instruction and education services below the postsecondary level that increase an individual’s ability to—

(A) read, write, and speak English and perform mathematics or other activities necessary for the attainment of a secondary school diploma or its recognized equivalent;

(B) transition to postsecondary education and training;

(C) obtain employment.*

*WIOA, SEC. 203 Definitions (1)(A)(B)(C)

Adult Education (Title II) Defined

Page 10: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

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Page 11: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

2015-2016EXTENSION OR

RFA?

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• State AEFLA Procurement Readiness Under WIOA - OCTAE Guidance Document

• Draft Key Dates• February 11, 2015 Extension/RFA Grant

Application Opens

• March 24, 2015 - 11:55PM Grants Due

Page 12: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

SIGNIFICANT WIOA DATES

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2015-2016 -Transition Year

o Implement all changes outlined in our transition plan (exceptions: funding for One-stops, EL Civics changes, and common performance measures.)

o New extension or RFA run

2016-2017 – Full Implementation

o RFA/extension awardees begin full implementation of WIOA

o Joint funding for One-stops begins

o EL Civics changes are implemented

o Common performance measures kick in

Page 13: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

WIOALOCAL AREAS, REGIONS & ONE

STOPSCONSIDERATIONS FOR RECOMMENDATIONS

Note:• Regional plans are required under WIOA

• Signing off on basic skills alignment is at the regional level• MOUs are required at the area level with local WDCs

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• WDCs & Local Elected Officials Recommend that the current WDC local areas are named as WIOA

Regions

• Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board & WIOA Taskforce Recommends 6 WIOA Regions

Page 14: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

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Page 15: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

DOL’S VISION FOR ONE-STOPS

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The National Vision is that One-Stops are not just Workforce anymore but an integrated service that is shared.

One-stops should not be a referral system but can actually serve individuals in the location they enter.

Robert Knight, Adult Services and Workforce System, DOL

• An integrated system that leverages resources

• Has integrated management systems

• Workforce side is funded to provide jobs skills training

• Everyone who walks into the One-Stop needs to be counted and put into the system

Page 16: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

THE BASIC EDUCATION FOR ADULTSVISION FOR ONE-STOPS

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Washington State One-Stops have integrated staff and co-located services whenever and wherever possible that move every individual to the Tipping Point and living wage jobs in the shortest time possible.

• Workforce, education, and training work with each individual to develop a career plan that gets them to a living wage job, life-sustaining skills, and meets the needs of the workforce

Career plans identify work and education goals as both long-term and short-term goals.

Employment and education happen together whenever possible

Page 17: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

PERCEIVED CHALLENGES TO ONE-STOP IMPLEMENTATION

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• An individual with primary responsibility to basic skills is not included on some local boards

• Some regions are looking to truly revision one-stops into integrated services while others feel no change is needed, and others suggest one-stops are only a referral system

• Others have not responded to requests for collaboration

• How will one-stops deal with students lacking a SSN?

• Integrated funding to one-stops will not change the support and resources to basic education individuals

• Students referred by one-stops to education providers will not make it to the campus

Page 18: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

BASIC EDUCATION FOR ADULTSRESOURCES AND CAPABILITIES

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• 1.5% of Federal Funds

• College and Career Pathways

• Co-located Space

• Shared Staff

• Testing & Education Placement Expertise

• Educational Advising and Navigation

• Incumbent Worker Training-I-BEST at Work

• Training & Skills Development

Page 19: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

ADDITIONAL WIOA UPDATES

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• Updated WDC Listing

Contact regional directors & introduce self

Recommend BEdA rep. to local board

MOU’s & funding One-stops

Regional providers decide if you prefer an umbrella MOU or Program MOU

Consider both 1.5% funds and in-kind support

• Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act Resources – DOL/DOE Guidance

Document

• WIOA defines the term “Exit” – WIOA Exit Document

• Youth Re-engagement and WIOA Out of School Youth Funds

Page 20: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

Washington’s Community and Technical

CollegesGuided Pathways Initiatives*

*SBCTC will offer a system-wide guided pathways 101 workshop during Winter quarter to explain what guided pathways are and what colleges would be signing up for when they submit an application for one of the College Spark grants in the spring.

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Page 21: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

WASHINGTON'S CTCS

TWO PATHWAY INITIATIVES

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• College Spark: Guided Pathways

• Bill & Melinda Gate Foundation: Student Success Centers – Jan’s letter to the Presidents

Page 22: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

GOVERNOR INSLEE’SWASHINGTON STATE INDUSTRY

SECTORS

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• Aerospace (Manufacturing)

• Agriculture

• Clean Energy

• Information and Communication Technology

• Life Sciences and Global Health (Healthcare)

• Maritime

• Military and Defense

http://www.governor.wa.gov/issues/issues/economy

Page 23: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

GUIDED PATHWAYS

http://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/media/k2/attachments/What-We-Know-Guided-Pathways.pdf 23

• The idea behind guided pathways is straightforward. College students are more likely to complete a degree in a timely fashion if they choose a program and develop an academic plan early on, have a clear road map of the courses they need to take to complete a credential, and receive guidance and support to help them stay on plan.

The guided pathways approach presents courses in the context of highly structured, educationally coherent program maps.

Page 24: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

META-MAJORS

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• Meta-majors are groups of academic programs with common or related subject matter that students are advised about when they begin college.

Page 25: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

WASHINGTON STATE ADULT EDUCATION 5-YEAR PLAN 2014-2019 &

WIOA REQUIREMENTS FOR TRANSITION 2015-2016

HTTP://WWW.SBCTC.EDU/COLLEGE/ABE/FY16TRANSITIONSTATEPLAN-6.1.15.PDF

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Pathways to College and Careers for

Washington’s Emerging Workforce

Page 26: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

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Page 27: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

PROMISE MORE ACCESS TO I-BESTI-BEST expansion programs increase pathway options

and acceleration for all levels of precollege students.

• On-ramp to I-BEST• Career specific• High School 21+• Integrated Digital English Acceleration

• Professional Technical I-BEST• Corrections I-BEST

• Professional Technical Expansion I-BEST

• Academic I-BEST

Expansion Initiatives

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Page 28: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

THE GUIDED PATHWAY FUNDED

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On-Ramps to I-BEST($25/quarter)

-HS 21+-I-BEST at Work-I-DEA-College Readiness-Career Specific

I-BEST Quarter 1 (Opportunity Grant &

State Need Grant)-Tuition-Books-Fees/Supplies

I-BEST to 2 Year Degree

(Ability to Benefit & State Need

Grant)-High School

Diploma

Baccalaureate Degree

(Ability to Benefit & State Need Grant)

Page 29: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

QUESTIONS?

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Page 30: Pathways to College & Careers for Washington’s Emerging Workforce Accelerated Pathways, Increased Opportunities WIOA Transition CBS Fall 2015 Jon M. Kerr,

Contacts

"Better Jobs. Better Futures. A Stronger Washington."

Jon M. Kerr, DirectorBasic Education for AdultsV (360) 704-4326E [email protected]

_________________________________________Washington State Board for Community & Technical Colleges1300 Quince St SE | PO Box 42495 | Olympia, Washington 98504

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