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Start Delivering Better Soft Skills Training!
Dr. Amanda Opperman, Director of Competency-Based Solutions, Wonderlic, Inc. Presentation © Wonderlic, Inc. 2016
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Introduction: Better understand which soft skills employers expect from graduates and how to verify those skills to employers. Benefit from Wonderlic’s 80 years of leadership as hiring experts to discover ways to turn the soft skills gap into an opportunity. Dive into results from two nationwide surveys that pinpoint employer expectations of soft skills training.
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Which soft skills employers expect from graduates:
Wonderlic’s National Consortium on Soft Skills Client Network: ~2,000 Educators ~10,000 Employers Steering Committee: 32 Employers, Career Educators, Community College Educators, & Non-Profit Organizations Advisory Committee: 372 employers of entry-level, mid-skilled workers from a variety of industries nationwide Research Partners: 800+ employers and educators volunteered for validation studies, usability testing, & surveys
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Which soft skills employers expect from graduates:
Competency rating & ranking by SMEs Refine based on pilot user feedback Survey of 270+ employers April 2016 Survey of 750+ employers July 2016 Iterate based on focus group feedback
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Which soft skills employers expect from graduates:
Other Nonverbal & Listening Skills Initiative Teamwork Interpersonal Skills Communication Self-Management Critical Thinking Professionalism Customer Service
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How to verify soft skills to employers:
1.7% of employers surveyed agreed that local career and community colleges provided them with credentials that clearly verify graduates’ soft skills 78.2% preferred receiving job-related, competency-based credentials over an academic transcript to verify soft skills 79.9% preferred hiring a student who had high scores on a job-related, competency-based assessment than one who had a high GPA
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How to verify soft skills to employers:
Unit One: Interacting with Others Lesson One: Interpersonal Skills Lesson Two: Nonverbal & Listening Skills Lesson Three: Communication Unit Two: Making Decisions Lesson Four: Self-Management Lesson Five: Critical Thinking Lesson Six: Initiative Unit Three: Delivering Results Lesson Seven: Professionalism Lesson Eight: Customer Service Curriculum Assessment Digital Badges Competency-Based
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How to verify soft skills to employers:
Unit One: Interacting with Others Lesson One: Interpersonal Skills Lesson Two: Nonverbal & Listening Skills Lesson Three: Communication Unit Two: Making Decisions Lesson Four: Self-Management Lesson Five: Critical Thinking Lesson Six: Initiative Unit Three: Delivering Results Lesson Seven: Professionalism Lesson Eight: Teamwork Student Learning Objective (SLO)1: Discuss the interpersonal skills needed to build collaborative relationships SLO2: Compare and contrast soft skills and hard skills SLO3: Discover how to develop informed, well-supported beliefs SLO4: Explain how to think critically about social accountability SLO5: Describe the process of perception by identifying influential factors of the perceiver, the target and the situation SLO6: Demonstrate professional methods of handling common challenges such as sexual harassment, inappropriate behavior, cultural and religious prejudice SLO7: Define the personal characteristics of a successful employee SLO8: Describe the reasons for performing performance appraisals
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How to verify soft skills to employers:
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How to verify soft skills to employers:
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How (not) to verify soft skills to employers:
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How to verify soft skills to employers :
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Turning the soft skills gap into an opportunity:
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Turning the soft skills gap into an opportunity:
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Turning the soft skills gap into an opportunity:
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Employer expectations of soft skills training:
86% of employers believe educators should work more closely with employers to ensure graduates’ skills align with workforce needs. 83% of employers prefer digital badges over academic transcripts when making hiring decisions 86.5% stated they would encourage local educators to provide their students with job-related, competency-based credentials that verify soft skills
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Q&A
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Thank you! Dr. Amanda Opperman, Director of Competency-Based Solutions at Wonderlic, Inc., is a veteran higher education professional with vast experience in and out of the classroom. She leads initiatives to help institutions achieve better outcomes through the planning and implementation of competency-based assessment, instruction, and digital badging. Dr. Opperman is also experienced in institutional effectiveness planning and faculty training. She began her career in higher education as an English and Rhetoric & Writing Studies professor at San Diego State University. Most recently, she served as the Assistant Dean at California University of Management and Sciences. She earned her PhD in Education from the San Diego State University/Claremont Graduate University Joint Doctoral program. Presentation © Wonderlic, Inc. 2016
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