Share this
Reskilling Workforce Seen as Critical to Manufacturing Marshall Plan
by CAEL on Aug 18, 2020
The Association for Manufacturing Excellence (AME), a nonprofit organization run by industry and academic volunteers, has long advocated for a manufacturing renaissance. According to its most recent white paper, reskilling the workforce will be key to realizing that vision.
In the white paper, A Manufacturing Marshall Plan, the organization lays out a recovery plan for North American manufacturing. Although prompted by the COVID-19 crisis, the paper argues the pandemic has laid bare disadvantages created by decades of offshoring, such as the United States heavy dependence on China for critical pharmaceutical supplies.
The Manufacturing Marshall Plan proposes to reconstitute domestic supply chains to avoid future shortages and other disruptions. It argues that nearshoring also will bolster the domestic economy, and even improve social and environmental prospects.
But the paper cautions that skill gaps could derail progress toward capturing such opportunities. It cites a U.S. Bureau of Labor statistic from the cusp of the pandemic. In February, when America was approaching full employment, there were still 6.8 million unfilled jobs, evidence that employers continued to search for skilled workers.
CAEL has provided key support to several initiatives that help align working adults skills and competencies with workforce demands within the manufacturing industry.
For example, advanced manufacturing was a focus industry in the Crosswalk Mapping Report that CAEL produced for Midwest Urban Strategies in late 2019. The report laid out crosswalk opportunities for individuals in declining or low-wage industries, such as retail.
These workers needed support to transition into the growing advanced manufacturing industry. CAEL outlined their skillsets, charting a course forward for them to acquire the skills required to crosswalk to an entry-level career in advanced manufacturing. CAEL also produced career pathways within the manufacturing industry that entry-level workers could access to advance within the industry.
CAEL also identified relevant training providers to aid these transitions. To further ease career changes, CAEL identified top employers in focus cities where job seekers could pursue employment opportunities.
Advanced manufacturing jobs were also a primary topic of conversation within the Miami Foundation Workforce Asset Mapping Report, which CAEL completed in March of 2020. CAEL was tasked with identifying a group of top occupations in the region that would pay a livable wage, were accessible by short-term training, and allowed opportunity for career growth/advancement.
Jobs typical in this manufacturing context included aircraft mechanics and general maintenance/repair workers. These professions were identified as top focus occupations for the region. CAEL then outlined short-term training strategies to increase access to the skills needed for these jobs. These included OJT and incumbent worker training, among others.
One of CAELs newest partnerships also encompasses a manufacturing component. Last month, CAEL began a partnership with the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. The scope includes developing competency maps that link employers and educators in a number of industries (including manufacturing).
A series of Regional Assemblies will bring together educators and employers to ensure that alignment exists between the skills employers need and the skills that educators are training for. This project will help to bridge skills gaps throughout Pennsylvania and lead to better-prepared applicants and employees within the manufacturing industry.
Echoing these and other strategies of CAEL and its partners, the AME white paper notes that partnerships among educators, businesses, and industry organizations can help ensure students are career ready after receiving a degree or other credential. At the same time, it cites the growing role of new collar jobs, which prioritize skills over degrees.
To cultivate these prized middle skills, the paper urges the manufacturing industry to focus on multigenerational employee retention and retraining programs. It points to a World War II-era concept, training within industry (TWI), as a model for doing so. Leaning heavily on experiential learning, TWI emerged from the need to quickly upskill workers who were replacing skilled workers who had gone overseas to fight in the war.
Indeed, the paper reports that 84 percent of manufacturing executives believe the U.S. is in a skills gap crisis, something it attributes to the demise of vocational education at the high school level. It sees a solution in the strategic partnerships that are forming among colleges, workforce developers, labor organizations, policy makers, and other aligned stakeholders to advocate work-based learning.
The need to close the manufacturing skills gap may be uniting more than just education and business. The paper notes that workforce development has drawn bipartisan support. That could well be its most impressive accomplishment yet.
Share this
- Adult Learner Success (110)
- CAEL Members (73)
- Success Stories (72)
- Workforce Development (59)
- Credit for Prior Learning (55)
- Best Practices (48)
- Career Pathways Support (31)
- Impact (31)
- Strategic Partnerships (29)
- Work-based Learning (29)
- Trends in Higher Education (25)
- Upskilling and Reskilling (21)
- DEI (19)
- Q&A (19)
- Curation (18)
- Retention and Completion (18)
- Talent Management (17)
- Adult Learner 360 (15)
- Policy (13)
- Short-term Credentials (11)
- Competency Based Education (CBE) (10)
- Adult Learner Academy (9)
- Military-connected Learners (9)
- Student support (9)
- Enrollment (8)
- Transfer Students (8)
- Research (7)
- Student Stories (7)
- Experiential Learning (6)
- Featured (6)
- HSIs (6)
- In the news (6)
- NACTEL (6)
- Online Learning (6)
- Case Studies (5)
- Community colleges (5)
- EPCE (5)
- Education Benefits (5)
- Guest blog (4)
- Wraparound Support (4)
- Apprenticeships (3)
- COVID-19 (3)
- Future of work (3)
- Structural Approaches to Learning (3)
- Accelerated Program (2)
- Credit Predictor Pro (2)
- HBCUs (2)
- Tuition (2)
- Skills-based hiring (1)
- Student parents (1)
- November 2024 (2)
- October 2024 (8)
- September 2024 (7)
- August 2024 (10)
- July 2024 (9)
- June 2024 (8)
- May 2024 (11)
- April 2024 (5)
- March 2024 (7)
- February 2024 (5)
- January 2024 (7)
- December 2023 (9)
- November 2023 (7)
- October 2023 (3)
- September 2023 (4)
- August 2023 (3)
- July 2023 (5)
- June 2023 (8)
- May 2023 (9)
- April 2023 (5)
- March 2023 (6)
- February 2023 (5)
- January 2023 (3)
- December 2022 (4)
- November 2022 (7)
- October 2022 (7)
- September 2022 (6)
- August 2022 (6)
- July 2022 (4)
- June 2022 (6)
- May 2022 (4)
- April 2022 (4)
- March 2022 (3)
- February 2022 (5)
- January 2022 (5)
- December 2021 (4)
- November 2021 (2)
- October 2021 (8)
- September 2021 (4)
- August 2021 (4)
- July 2021 (2)
- June 2021 (6)
- May 2021 (5)
- April 2021 (9)
- March 2021 (8)
- February 2021 (5)
- January 2021 (4)
- December 2020 (4)
- November 2020 (3)
- October 2020 (6)
- September 2020 (2)
- August 2020 (1)
- July 2020 (4)
- May 2020 (2)
- April 2020 (1)
- March 2020 (2)
- February 2020 (3)
- January 2020 (3)
- December 2019 (2)
- July 2019 (1)
- May 2019 (1)
- February 2019 (1)
- January 2019 (1)
- October 2018 (4)
- September 2018 (1)
- August 2018 (1)
- July 2018 (1)
- May 2018 (1)
- April 2018 (2)
- March 2018 (1)
- February 2018 (2)
- September 2017 (1)
- August 2017 (2)
- July 2017 (5)
- June 2017 (4)
- May 2017 (3)
- March 2017 (1)
- February 2017 (4)
- December 2016 (3)
- November 2016 (1)
- October 2016 (3)
- August 2016 (8)
- July 2016 (2)
- June 2016 (2)
- May 2016 (5)
- April 2016 (2)
- March 2016 (6)
- February 2016 (9)
- January 2016 (4)
- January 2015 (2)