Kentucky Community and Technical College System
Marketing & Communications: Today's News

Ky. ranks No. 8 for work-force training

WorkKeys prepares employees for jobs

Candlelight vigil at ECC remembers and supports victims of domestic abuse

 

Business Courier
November 5, 2003

Ky. ranks No. 8 for work-force training

Expansion Management magazine has ranked Kentucky as the eighth-best state in the nation for work-force training.

According to a news release from the Kentucky Cabinet for Economic Development, the rankings were based on a number of criteria, including job creation requirements, funding restrictions, use of local schools for training, employer costs, eligible industries, payout schedule and wage requirements.

In Kentucky, the Bluegrass State Skills Corp. spearheads work-force training through partnerships with the Cabinet for Workforce Development, Kentucky Community and Technical College System and other public and private-sector entities.

"Kentucky's successful training programs demonstrate that the administration and legislature understand the importance of a well-trained work force," said Ken Carroll, executive director of the BSSC, in a news release. "A company's No. 1 asset is its work force. Therefore, work-force development is always a priority in economic development."

Expansion Management's Top 15 states for work-force training, in order, are South Carolina, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Virginia, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Michigan, Texas, California, Kansas, Delaware, Wisconsin and Mississippi.

 

The Messenger
November 1, 2003

WorkKeys prepares employees for jobs

Madisonville Community College's WorkKeys Center, which opens Monday, offers a new way for potential employees to demonstrate their skills.

"This is a new hiring process system," said Professor Judy Moore, who has coordinated the WorkKeys effort. "Employers are really liking it."

Potential employees will take WorkKeys tests to assess their skill level. Those who need extra help will be offered free remediation. Those who score above a certain level will earn Kentucky Employability Certificates.

The program has three purposes.

"One is for the employer to know what kind of employee they're getting," Moore said. "Second is for the employee to be able to improve their skills through the remediation we have available. The third one would be to develop an economic database of our work force for Hopkins County."

AutoLiv has already used WorkKeys. Job profiling of the entry-level production associate's position was completed with the help of workers who currently fill that job. Job profiling determines specific skills needed for a position and which WorkKeys tests best measure that.

AutoLiv intends to begin using the system to identify candidates for employment, said Human Resource Manager Alison Sanderson.

"I hope other companies and different community organizations will come on board and utilize the WorkKeys," she said. "I think it'll be great for the community. ... I also feel like if we can get this throughout the community, then we will have a better-educated work force."

Hopkins County government has already committed to use the program when filling positions.

The database that will be compiled of WorkKeys participants and their skill levels will be an asset in economic development efforts, said Madisonville-Hopkins County Economic Development Director Danny Koon.

"This is what's going to prove we have an educated work force," Moore said.

Koon said, "It will be a tremendous help. The single most important question of someone coming to our community who's not real familiar with the quality of our work force is what is the skill level. This would be a database that would be available not only to our existing industries but to our potential industries that would show the skill level of the work force in our community."

Owensboro, which has WorkKeys participation of 90 percent of its industries, has used the database as a recruitment tool, he said.

"It's also a good planning tool for training and skills upgrade for existing industries and for the individual who's taking the WorkKeys," Koon said.

Most clients of the WorkKeys Center, which is located on School Avenue in the same building as Adult Centers for Educational Excellence, will be referred through JobNet. A few, however, are expected to come in on their own. They will complete the WorkKeys tests through ACE2, which will offer free remediation to those who need it.

Those who earn WorkKeys scores of four or above in applied mathematics, locating information and reading for information will receive a Kentucky Employability Certificate.

About 80 percent of all jobs require those three skills, Moore said.

"There's nothing else out there that measures those skills," she said. "You have a high school diploma, but it doesn't say what level you read. ... Employers have a hard time comparing, when they look at an applicant pool, what they have. This helps give them some guidance as to what a person's basic skill levels are."

Jamie Jones, who started as a caseworker with the Hopkins County Child Support Unit two weeks ago, earned the first certificate in Hopkins County. Two others have since successfully completed the testing.

"I came in for the interview and they wanted me to do the testing just to find out a little bit more about my abilities," Jones said. "I think it's a really good idea because you can't know that much about a person's abilities just in an interview."

Jones' supervisor, Office Manager Sandy Messamore, said it's suggested - but not required - that applicants take the tests.

"I think it will weigh heavily, the testing, in conjunction with a good resume and a good interview," Messamore said. "A lot of times during an interview you can't really determine what a person's skills are. This helps us better determine whether someone has the necessary skills to perform the job."

Another person who will start work at the child support unit later this month also completed the testing, she said.

"I would highly recommend it, not only from an employer perspective but also from prospective employees' abilities to understand what their strengths or weaknesses are and determine what they need to brush up on if they're interested in a certain field of work," Messamore said. "I'm really impressed with it. I didn't know if I would be or not, but after we got the results, I'm really impressed with it."


The New-Enterprise
October 31, 2003

Candlelight vigil at ECC remembers and supports victims of domestic abuse

Almost 60 tiny flames flickered in the darkened room, symbolizing hope for victims and survivors of domestic violence. Every 13 seconds, the silver peals of a bell rang out, signifying the abuse of another victim.

To commemorate Domestic Violence Awareness Month, the Elizabethtown Community College Domestic Violence Awareness Committee, in conjunction with SpringHaven, presented the third annual Domestic Violence Candlelight Vigil Thursday night. Held in ECC's Morrison Gallery, the vigil included several original poems and songs depicting the effects of domestic abuse, a keynote speech given by a survivor and a candle lighting ceremony.

The vigil, which has almost tripled in size since its inception three years ago, is intended to increase community awareness, said Pem Buck, one of the vigil's originators.

"It's time to stop being quiet. Victims don't need to feel ashamed. (Abuse) is widespread; it doesn't need to be a little secret behind closed doors."

Debbie Salsman, residential program director at SpringHaven, said the vigil provides healing for victims.

"It helps validate what they've been through."

One in five women will experience physical or sexual assault, which is the leading cause of injury in women ages 18 to 44, Salsman said. Each day in the United States, three women die at the hands of a current or former intimate partner.

"They need to be remembered," She said. "We also need to celebrate the survivors and the courage they have."

The vigil took on the task of remembrance with its theme "Remembering our losses, celebrating our triumphs."

"It's easy to think that it didn't happen in Elizabethtown," said Nikki Ellis, who gave the program's welcome. "But it did, and it does."

However, Buck acknowledged that not all places in the world struggle with this issue.

"We don't have to have a society like this."