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No. 78 Fall 2011
PUBLISHED BY THE

A COMMUNIT Y D E V E LO P ME NT P UBL IC ATION

CASCADE

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
STUDIES & EDUCATION
DEPARTMENT OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF PHILADELPHIA

2 — Message from the
Community Affairs Officer
3 — A Federal Perspective on
Workforce Development
Issues
6 — The Collapse of the
Labor Market for
16- to 24-Year-Olds
8 — Spotlight on Research:
The Economic Benefit
of a Community College
Education
18 — Workforce Development
Resources
19 — New Book Probes
American Mortgage
System
20 — Calendar of Events

Workforce Development Partnership Serves
Both Employers and Employees
By Cheryl Feldman, Executive Director, District 1199C Training and Upgrading Fund,
Philadelphia
The health-care industry is the largest
employer in Pennsylvania, and as a result, this industry has a huge impact on
the state’s economy.1 As baby boomers
age and their health-care needs increase,
however, the state is facing a health-care
workforce shortage that is magnified by
high turnover rates, an inadequate pool
of qualified employees, and a lack
of qualified instructors.1,2

The District 1199C Training and Upgrading
Fund (Training Fund) has a dual mission:
•

Provide health-care employers with
qualified, trained employees who can
fill open positions.
...continued on page 10
Credit: Maida Odom

INSIDE:

In Philadelphia, the workforce
crisis is further exacerbated by candidates’ lack of basic skills. Literacy
skills are essential in the healthcare field. The health-care industry,
which constituted 20.8 percent of
private employment in Philadelphia in 2009, has shown growth
during the recession, but new jobs
require literate, trained employees.3
Pennsylvania Workforce Investment
Board, “Health Care Industry Partnerships and the Pennsylvania Center for
Health Careers: The Interconnected
Relationship,” December 2010, available
at http://tinyurl.com/3hne8sw.

1

Institute of Medicine of the National
Academies, “Retooling for an Aging
America: Building the Health Care Workforce,” Fact Sheet, April 2008, available at
http://tinyurl.com/6d8vbq2.

2

This statistic is from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics’ Current Employment Survey
from 2009.

3

www.philadelphiafed.org

During a visit to the Training and Upgrading Fund in February
2011, Arne Duncan (left), U.S. secretary of education; Henry
Nicholas, president of District 1199C and of the National Union
of Hospital and Health Care Employees; and Hilda L. Solis, U.S.
secretary of labor, welcomed students who received asylum
from Myanmar.
1

CASCADE

No. 78
Fall 2011

Cascade is published three times a year by
the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s
Community Development Studies and
Education Department and is available at
www.philadelphiafed.org. Material may be
reprinted or abstracted provided Cascade is
credited. The views expressed in Cascade are
not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Philadelphia or the Federal Reserve
System. Send comments to Keith L. Rolland at
215-574-6569 or keith.rolland@phil.frb.org. To
subscribe, go to http://www.philadelphiafed.org/
publications/.
Community Development Studies and
Education Department
Kenyatta Burney
Senior Staff Assistant
215-574-6037
kenyatta.burney@phil.frb.org
Albert Chin
Community Development Research Associate
215-574-6461
albert.chin@phil.frb.org
Jeri Cohen-Bauman
Lead Administrative Assistant
215-574-6458
jeri.cohen-bauman@phil.frb.org
Andrew T. Hill, Ph.D.
Economic Education Advisor and Team Leader
215-574-4392
andrew.hill@phil.frb.org
Amy B. Lempert
Community Development Advisor and Outreach
Coordinator
215-574-6570
amy.lempert@phil.frb.org
Erin Mierzwa
Manager, Administration & Research
215-574-6641
erin.mierzwa@phil.frb.org
Dede Myers
Vice President and Community Affairs Officer
215-574-6482
dede.myers@phil.frb.org
Harriet Newburger, Ph.D.
Community Development Research Advisor
215-574-3819
harriet.newburger@phil.frb.org
Keith L. Rolland
Community Development Advisor
215-574-6569
keith.rolland@phil.frb.org
Marvin M. Smith, Ph.D.
Community Development Research Advisor
215-574-6393
marty.smith@phil.frb.org
Todd Zartman
Economic Education Specialist
215-574-6457
todd.zartman@phil.frb.org

2

Message from the
Community Affairs Officer
Many of us in the community development field are concerned about the
persistently high rate of unemployment during the recession. The bleak
employment prospects for less educated populations, males, and members of racial and ethnic minorities are
distressing and worrisome.
We’ve started to explore workforce development issues and challenges at the
Philadelphia Fed and other Reserve
Banks. There’s a mixed record of success in this field; therefore, we’ve set
out to understand which approaches
are successful. One impressive model
is the 37-year-old partnership that exists between the District 1199C Training and Upgrading Fund (Training
Fund) and 52 health-care employers
in the Philadelphia area. The Training
Fund works closely with employers to
understand their staffing and training
needs and develop programs accordingly. It provides a wide range of services at one location by blending many
government and philanthropic programs and funding streams. It serves
both employed and unemployed
workers, and union members as well
as nonmember community residents.
In addition, Jane Oates, assistant
secretary of the Department of Labor’s
Employment and Training Administration, gives us a valuable federal
perspective and discusses successful
earn-while-you-learn models such as
on-the-job training (OJT) and registered apprenticeships. With OJT, employers can attract and retain employees who can assist their businesses,
and in return, employees gain valuable
work experience. The U.S. Department
of Labor also provides a helpful road
map into how the public workforce
development system is organized.

In another article, Neeta P. Fogg and
Paul E. Harrington, both with Drexel
University’s Center for Labor Markets and Policy, discuss the collapse
of the labor market for young people
between the ages of 16 and 24. They
describe a growing urban issue of
disconnection of teens from the job
market and indicate that pathways
need to be rebuilt from high schools to
employers, who look for occupational
and behavioral traits as well as academic skills.
Meanwhile, Marty Smith reports on a
study that found that average wages
and salaries for young women and
men who enroll in community colleges
and who earned associate’s degrees are
substantially higher than those of their
peers whose education did not extend
beyond high school. The study notes
that the most substantial earnings
benefits associated with community
college education and postsecondary
education in general accrue to women.
Additionally, readers can learn more
through a useful resource list of
research studies, articles, and tools on
workforce development issues concerning high schools, community colleges, and disadvantaged populations.
It includes some of the latest research
studies in the field.
We will continue to examine workforce development issues, particularly
in our Federal Reserve District, and
welcome your comments and reactions
to this edition.

A Federal Perspective on Workforce Development Issues
By Jane Oates, Assistant Secretary, Employment and Training Administration, U.S. Department of Labor
The Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration
(ETA) is the federal agency charged
with supporting the efficient functioning of the U.S. labor market by
providing job training, employment, labor market information, and
income support for workers who
have lost their jobs. With an annual
budget of about $10 billion, the ETA
administers programs that annually
serve about 39 million unemployed
workers and incumbent employees
and respond to the workforce needs
of employers.

the Department of
Health and Human
Services’ Administration for Children and
Families, the Department of Commerce’s
Economic Development Administration,
and other agencies,
in convening regional
meetings, providing joint guidance,
offering shared grant
opportunities, and
conducting research.

Today’s economy poses unique challenges. The workforce development
field faces a vastly changed national
labor market in which millions of
employees have been dislocated
from their jobs in traditional industries and need new skills to compete for jobs in the labor market.
Now more than ever, there is fierce
global competition for an educated
workforce with industry-recognized
credentials and postsecondary
education and skills. To address
these economic dynamics, the ETA
is strengthening partnerships across
federal agencies, developing clear
career pathways that lead to attainment of industry-recognized credentials, developing better virtual career
tools, and investing in “earn and
learn” training strategies.

Jobs Accelerator
Initiative
Instructor James Scott (left) guides apprentice Doug Bonner in a
The Jobs and Innowelding class at Gloucester County College in New Jersey. The
vation Accelerator
U.S. Department of Labor’s apprenticeship office registered both
the apprentice and the college’s apprenticeship program to ensure
Challenge initiative
that they meet standards for technical instruction and other areas.
coordinates resources
from 16 federal
In the past, different federal agencies
agencies to spur economic growth
would typically award funding sepathrough public–private partnerrately to state or local governments
ships in regions around the country.
or other entities. These resources
Under the Jobs Accelerator funding
may or may not have been awarded
competition, which was held from
to the same geographical area, and
May through July of 2011, regions
if they were, the level of coordinacompeted for complementary federtion on the ground varied consideral resources for workforce developably. However, the Jobs Accelerator
ment, economic development, and
represents a new approach in which
small business development. The
federal agencies award economic
ETA will invest up to $20 million for
development, small business develtechnical skills training, the Deopment, and workforce development
partment of Commerce’s Economic
funds to integrated projects that
Development Administration will
support industry clusters in defined
invest up to $10 million in economic
regional economies.
adjustment assistance funds, and
the Small Business Administration
This interagency collaboration alwill invest up to $3 million in techlows applicants to submit one applinical assistance. In addition, mulcation to access three complementary
tiple federal agencies are committed
federal sources to comprehensively
to providing technical assistance to
support cluster development. The
support the 20 regions that will be
award announcements are expected
selected in the competition.
in September 2011.1

New Federal Partnerships

Particularly in the face of today’s
budget constraints, the ETA is committed to finding new ways to work
across federal programs to improve
outcomes for employees and businesses. The ETA has strong ties with
the Department of Education’s Office
of Vocational and Adult Education,
1

For program information, see http://www.eda.gov/InvestmentsGrants/jobsandinnovationchallenge.

3

Career Pathways and
Credential Attainment
Another interagency collaborative
effort focuses on career pathways,
which are clear sequences of coursework and employer-valued credentials that help individuals train
for positions that are in demand in
growing industries.2 Career pathways enable employees, at different
points in their work history and
educational history, to access training and progressively advance in the
workplace.
The ETA’s interest in career pathways
reflects its commitment to lifelong
learning and skills upgrading and
its focus on attaining credentials. In
January 2010, in a training and employment guidance letter to grantees
and other workforce stakeholders,
the ETA announced its goal of increasing the credentialing rate of individuals enrolled in ETA-supported
programs.3 In addition, the guidance
letter outlined strategies that stakeholders can take to achieve this goal.
The ETA recognizes that career
pathway models are developed at
the state, local, or regional levels and
should involve a range of stakeholders in education, workforce development, human services, economic development, and businesses. The ETA,
the Department of Education’s Office
of Vocational and Adult Education,
and the Department of Health and
Human Services’ Administration for
Children and Families have joined
forces to promote career pathways.
For example, the Administration for
Children and Families and the Office
of Vocational and Adult Education
staffs worked with the ETA staff to
develop the Department of Labor’s

(DOL) Career Pathways Institute,
a technical assistance initiative that
brings together stakeholders to
participate in a strategic planning
process with career pathway content experts. The three agencies are
developing joint communications to
be shared with the agencies’ stakeholders on the guiding principles
and essential elements in developing
career pathway programs.

Virtual Career Tools

Another priority for the ETA is
improving virtual access to career
information. Over the past year, the
ETA has enhanced existing virtual
tools and launched new online resources that make it easier for youth
to explore possible careers, for unemployed workers to get the assistance
they need to get back to work, and for
incumbent workers to seek out new
opportunities. Virtual career tools are
one of the key strategies the agency
is using to equip workers with the
knowledge needed to navigate the
labor market and connect them with
employers with job openings.
One virtual career tool, www.
mySkillsmyFuture.org, enables job
seekers and intermediaries to match
a worker’s occupational skills and
experiences with the skills needed
in other occupations. The website is
designed for use as either a selfhelp tool or with the assistance of
expert advisers. Another online tool,
www.MyNextMove.gov, allows
individuals to explore careers. The
site includes an online interest assessment; an easy-to-read one-page
occupation profile highlighting
knowledge, skills, abilities, technologies used, and simplified salary
and outlook information; and links

for specific training and employment opportunities.

Earn-While-You-Learn Models

Many unemployed Americans,
particularly the growing number of
long-term unemployed, need to earn
wages while they complete training
in order to support themselves and
their families. Therefore, the ETA is
focusing on effective models — such
as on-the-job training (OJT), registered apprenticeships, and work experiences for youth — that provide
earnings and increase employability,
skills, and opportunities for advancement, particularly for disadvantaged
populations.
On-the-Job Training
In OJT, workers are hired by employers and earn wages while training
at the workplace. Employers are
reimbursed for a portion of the cost
of training a new employee. OJT
requires active participation from
employers for training to take place
at a worksite and is based on an
agreement between the employer
and the OJT provider. Participants
have a chance to “learn and earn”
while working in a job that provides
a regular paycheck. OJT works
because the training provider takes
into consideration the skill set of
laid-off and/or unemployed employees and the job needs of local industries. Employers using OJT are in
health care, information technology,
construction, manufacturing, and
many other industries.
OJT is an allowable activity under
the Workforce Investment Act (WIA)
in which employers can be reimbursed for up to 50 percent of the
cost of training employees at a job

A Center for Law and Social Policy report states: “Ideally, career pathways are not a separate program, but a framework for weaving together adult
education, training, and college programs that are currently separated into silos and connecting those services to employers’ workforce needs.” See
http://tinyurl.com/42bw6yy.

2

3

See http://wdr.doleta.gov/directives/attach/TEGL15-10.pdf.

4

site. The ETA has also awarded $75
million in OJT national emergency
grants that allow employers to be reimbursed for 50 percent to 90 percent
of the cost of training employees for
up to six months.

Employers may hesitate to add employees in uncertain economic times,
and OJT helps assure employers
that participants can quickly become a valuable asset. OJT provides
employees with job experience and

sometimes a permanent job, even if
there has been substantial time since
the participant’s last job. OJT is a
suitable training option for various
workers, including low-income and
low-skilled individuals, dislocated
...continued on page 13

The U.S. Public Workforce System
Overview
The Workforce Investment Act (WIA) of 1998 established a national public workforce system funded by the federal government and operated by states and local agencies and organizations. The system consists of a network of One-Stop Career
Centers that provide information and access to a wide array
of job training, education, and employment services. About
2,900 One-Stop Career Centers are operated across the country
by community colleges, community-based organizations, forprofit entities, and government agencies.

Services for Job Seekers and Employers

Through One-Stop Career Centers, millions of job seekers each
year receive:
•
•
•

•
•

Up-to-date labor market information that identifies job
vacancies, skills necessary for available jobs, and local,
regional, and national employment trends;
Career counseling and assessments of skill levels, aptitudes, and abilities;
Information on employment-related services, including
information about education and training programs and
referrals to supportive services, help filing claims for unemployment insurance, and help evaluating eligibility for
job training and education programs and student financial
aid;
Access to job postings, job search, and placement assistance; and
Training, including skills upgrading, adult education, and
occupational skills, on-the-job, entrepreneurial, and job
readiness training.

One-Stop Career Centers also provide employers with a single
point of contact to supply information about current and
future workforce needs, to list job openings, and to hire skilled
workers.

One-Stop Partner Programs

The WIA established that programs administered by the four
federal departments listed below would be part of the OneStop system to ensure job seekers’ access to a comprehensive
range of services. As a result, information and access to the following federal programs are available at the One-Stop Career
Centers:
•

•

•
•

the Wagner–Peyser Employment Service; the Senior
Community Service Employment Program; the Trade
Adjustment Assistance program; veterans’ employment
and training programs; and unemployment insurance
U.S. Department of Education programs — adult education and literacy programs under the WIA; Vocational
Rehabilitation Act programs; and postsecondary vocational education under the Perkins Act
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services programs — community services block grants
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
— employment and training activities

States may also choose to provide information at the centers
on other programs, such as Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program,
and programs under the National and Community Service
Act.

Federal–State–Local Partnerships

The public workforce system is a collaborative effort between the federal government, state governments, and local
agencies and organizations. The WIA is administered at the
national level by the Department of Labor’s Employment
and Training Administration (ETA). Most WIA funds are
distributed by the ETA through statutory formulas to state
governments and by states to local agencies and organizations, where services are delivered to adult and youth job
seekers through the One-Stop Career Center system.
Over 600 Workforce Investment Boards (WIBs) operate at
the state and local levels to develop strategic plans and set
funding priorities for the public workforce system. Most of
the members of the WIBs must be from the business sector.
Members also include representatives of education providers, labor organizations, community-based organizations,
economic development agencies, and One-Stop partner
programs.

Locating One-Stop Career Centers

To find a One-Stop Career Center, visit www.servicelocator.
org or call 1-877-US2-JOBS.
		
		

–U.S. Department of Labor’s Employment
and Training Administration

U.S. Department of Labor programs — adult, dislocated
worker, and youth programs under WIA; Job Corps;

5

The Collapse of the Labor Market for 16- to 24-Year-Olds
By Neeta P. Fogg, Research Professor, Center for Labor Markets and Policy, Drexel University, and Paul E. Harrington, Director,
Center for Labor Markets and Policy, Drexel University
Young adulthood — between the
ages of 16 and 24 — is a critically
important time for individuals to
develop work-related abilities so that
they can become productive members of society. In other words, this
is the time when young people make
important decisions about developing what economist Frederick Harbison calls their “human capital,” that
is, the “energies, skills, talents and
knowledge…which can be applied
to the production of goods or the
rendering of useful services.”1
Young people who are not engaged
in work or school do not adequately
develop their productive abilities,
resulting in diminished lifetime
earnings.2
Employment is an important way
for young adults to acquire human
capital in the form of work experience and behavioral traits. These
behavioral traits, or soft skills, such
as reliability, honesty, respectfulness,
and communications competencies,
are customarily acquired from paid
labor market work experience and
are valued by employers. Unfortunately, opportunities for young
people to acquire work experience
have been declining during the past
decade. Even during the economic
Frederick H. Harbison, Human Resources as
the Wealth of Nations. New York: Oxford, 1972.

1

In 2006, male high school dropouts in Philadelphia had expected lifetime earnings of just
$457,000 over their working lives, while those
who completed high school had expected
earnings of $870,000. See Neeta P. Fogg,
Paul E. Harrington, and Ishwar Khatiwada,
“The Tax and Transfer Impacts of Dropping
Out of High School in Philadelphia City and
Suburbs,” Center for Labor Market Studies,
Northeastern University, Boston, January
2009, available at http://www.inpathways.
net/Fiscal_consequences_dropout_Philly.pdf.
2

6

recovery after the 2001 recession, opportunities for the nation’s youth to
find work have continued to decline.

Declines in Employment
Opportunities for Young Adults

Many of the nation’s young adults
have withdrawn from active participation in the labor market and
stopped looking for work. This trend
is evident in the sharp reductions in
the youth labor force participation
rates. Across the nation, the share of
teens actively engaged in the labor
market has declined from 52 percent
in 2000 to 35 percent in 2010. There
have also been large decreases in the
number of 20- to 24-year-olds in the
labor force. The labor force participation rate of these young adults
declined from nearly 78 percent in
2000 to just over 71 percent in 2010
(see Table 1).
Along with the sharp decline in the
labor force attachment of young
people over the past decade, the likelihood that a young person — who

chooses to remain engaged in the
job market — will be employed has
also fallen considerably. The youth
unemployment rate, which measures
the proportion of young people in
the labor force who are jobless but
are actively trying to find work,
doubled over the first decade of the
21st century. The nation’s teen unemployment rate rose from 13 percent
in 2000 to 26 percent in 2010. Among
young adults between the ages of
20 and 24, the unemployment rate
increased from 7 percent in 2000 to
over 15 percent in 2010 (see Table 1).
It seems likely that part of the labor
force withdrawal of young people
that occurred over the past decade
is a product of the extraordinary
rise in unemployment rates among
teens and young adults. As young
people see reduced opportunities for
finding employment, they stop their
job search and effectively withdraw
from the labor force.
Rising labor force withdrawals and
unemployment among the nation’s

Table 1: Labor Market Outcomes of U.S. Teens and Young
Adults; 2000, 2007, and 2010
2000–2010
2010

Absolute
Change

Relative
Change

−17.1%

−32.9%

2000

2007

52.0%

41.3% 34.9%

Unemployment rate

13.1%

15.7% 25.9%

12.8%

97.7%

Employment rate

45.2%

34.8% 25.9%

−19.3%

−42.7%

Labor force participation rate

77.8%

74.4% 71.4%

−6.4%

−8.2%

Unemployment rate

7.2%

8.2%

8.3%

115.3%

Employment rate

72.2%

68.4% 60.3%

−11.9%

−16.5%

16–19 Years of Age
Labor force participation rate

20–24 Years of Age
15.5%

Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Current Population Survey, Monthly Public Use Data
Files — 2000, 2007, and 2010, tabulations by the Center for Labor Markets and Policy, Drexel
University

youth have resulted in a sharp decline in the youth employment rate,
which is a measure of the share of all
young people who have a job. The
employment rate of young adults 16
to 19 years of age declined from 45
percent in 2000 to 35 percent in 2007.
Since 2007, the employment rate has
fallen another 9 percentage points,
to 26 percent in 2010 — which is a
historical low. The employment rate
of 20- to 24-year-olds in the nation
declined from 72 percent in 2000 to
68 percent in 2007. The rate further
dropped to 60 percent in 2010, representing a decline of 8 percentage
points during the three years that
included the Great Recession (see
Table 1).
In 2010, only one in four teens and
six out of 10 young adults in the
nation were employed. The Great
Recession has simply exacerbated
the increasingly tenuous employment situation among the nation’s
youth that characterized the earlier
period of recession and recovery. The
current environment of slow/no job
growth that the country has experienced since the end of the recession
in June 2009 has made the nation’s
labor markets very competitive, as
large numbers of unemployed workers chase very few jobs. Over the first
half of this year, the ratio of unemployed workers to job vacancies has
remained in the 4.5 to 5.0 range.3
Young people are competing for jobs
with adults and increasingly with
older workers. We have found that
nationally employers have shown
a preference for older workers (55
years of age and older) — even for
jobs that were traditionally staffed

by young people.
The share of older
workers in the
nation’s workforce
has increased from
17 percent in 2006
to 20 percent in
2010, with increases occurring across
all industries and
occupations.4 In
the absence of policies and strategies
targeted toward
creating employment pathways for
young adults, a
rebound in youth
employment is
unlikely in this
environment.

A student receives training in the culinary vocational program at
Shawsheen Valley Technical High School in Billerica, MA, 20 miles
northwest of Boston. The school integrates vocational–technical
and academic curricula.

Postsecondary Education as a
Career Alternative

The collapse of the teen labor market
over the past few years has led an
increasing number of teens and
young adults to seek postsecondary
education, accelerating the longterm trend of more and more teens
and young adults enrolling in the
nation’s postsecondary schools. In
its October supplement to the annual Current Population Survey, the
Bureau of Labor Statistics found that
a record share (70 percent) of 2009
high school graduates entered into
a postsecondary program in the fall
immediately after graduation; the
2010 share was nearly as great. One
explanation for this record college
enrollment rate is that, as the job
prospects for teens deteriorated so
significantly, they have sought an
alternative activity in the form of
schooling instead of remaining idle.

It is likely that some of these young
people would not have enrolled in
school if more plentiful job opportunities were available to them.
Much of the rise in postsecondary
enrollments has occurred in the
nation’s community college system.
These open enrollment institutions
have experienced total enrollment
increases in the 15 to 20 percent
range since the beginning of the
recession, placing great stress on
this segment of the higher education system. Per capita full-time
student funding is well below that
of the four-year higher education
system, yet the community colleges
enroll students with low basic skills
proficiencies compared with other
college students. The share of their
entering cohort of newly minted
high school graduates enrolled in
...continued on page 15

Although real GDP had recovered to its pre-recession peak by the first quarter of 2011, payroll employment levels have remained below the June 2009
recession trough, with large payroll employment declines continuing through the first two quarters of the recovery followed by very sluggish employment expansion since then.

3

Neeta P. Fogg and Paul E. Harrington, “Rising Demand for Older Workers Despite the Economic Recession: Accommodation and Universal Design for
the New American Workforce,” Public Policy and Aging Report, 21:1 (Winter 2011), pp. 11–17.

4

7

The Economic Benefit of a Community College Education
The persistently high rate of unemployment during the economic
recovery continues to challenge policymakers and frustrate those seeking employment. At the same time,
the federal government continues
to pursue policies to stimulate job
growth. However, many of the unemployed lack the skills or training
required for the jobs that are available. More reliance on workforce
development might be the avenue
to take in order to equip low-skilled
workers with the proficiency to
obtain jobs and help those at risk of
losing their job to acquire the additional skills necessary to retain their
employment. One type of institution that might provide the needed
building or upgrading of skills is a
community college. The research on
the effect of community colleges on
employment and earnings is mixed.
However, Dave E. Marcotte provides
a fresh perspective on the issue by
focusing not only on the labor market returns to a community college
degree or certificate but also on the
credits earned without receiving a
degree or certificate.1

Background

Marcotte pointed out that “since the
early 1980s, the earnings of workers with a postsecondary education
have grown substantially, relative

to those of their high school peers.”
One rationale for the increase is the
“shifts in the structure of demand in
the labor market that have favored
workers with more skill.” While
most attention has been focused on
four-year institutions as a source
for providing postsecondary education, community colleges2 have been
given little consideration. Marcotte
observed that “nearly 40% of all
students enrolled in postsecondary education are at [community
colleges].” Moreover, enrollment
in community colleges has been
increasing. The author further noted
that the “recent economic downturn
has been cited as an important factor
behind large increases in enrollment
in community colleges across the
country.” According to Marcotte,
“because of open enrollment policies, low tuition, and their applied
courses, community colleges can be
relatively attractive during difficult
times for adults looking to upgrade
skills and traditional college students
facing financial hardship.”

sible appeal of a community college
education, and the receptiveness of
community college enrollment to
policy initiatives. In regard to the
latter, Marcotte offered the following observations: “First, community
colleges provide educational opportunities to students who are typically economically disadvantaged,
and whose academic preparation is
typically not as strong. These are the
students most at risk of being left
behind by ongoing changes in the
labor market. Second, community
colleges are a principal mechanism
for upgrading skills of those already
in the workforce because of their
open admissions policies and flexible courses of study, which include
degree programs, certificates, and
nondegree courses. Finally, as others
have argued, community college
enrollment is likely to be particularly
amenable to policy intervention
because they enroll a larger share of
students affected by state and federal
financial aid.”

Given the current economic environment, it is important not only to get
a better understanding of the economic returns to a community college education but also to determine
which segments of the population
might benefit the most, the pos-

In light of the established body
of research that underscores the
effect of postsecondary education on earnings and employment,
the author sought to augment our
knowledge of the value of enrolling
at a community college. He used

Data and Methodology

1

Dave E. Marcotte, “The Earnings Effect of Education at Community Colleges,” Contemporary Economic Policy, 28:1 (January 2010), pp. 36–51.

2

The author uses the terms two-year postsecondary institutions and community colleges synonymously. The former also includes junior colleges.

8

data from the 2000 follow-up of the
National Education Longitudinal
Survey (NELS). “The NELS follows
a nationally representative sample
of students who were in the eighth
grade in 1988.” The author used
only those “sample members who
completed interviews in all years,
and who were not still enrolled in a
postsecondary institution in 1999 or
at the time of the 2000 interview.”
The data contain information on the
postsecondary education and labor
force experiences (including employment, earnings, and occupation) of
the cohort following high school in
1992. The cohort was between 25 and
27 years of age by 2000.
During the course of his analysis,
Marcotte estimated several regression models. Since he could “measure completed degrees” as well
as “years of postsecondary study
among those not earning degrees,”
he was able to estimate the returns to
degrees separately from the returns
to postsecondary study without
degrees. The author also estimated
the returns to credits earned in
occupational versus academic
courses. To isolate these returns, he
controlled for other possible influences “between those who enroll in
postsecondary institutions and those
who do not as well as among those
completing different levels of postsecondary education.” Among those
likely influences were differences
in the educational environment or
expectations at home, the economic
status of the sample members, the
academic culture of their high
schools, and “any preexisting differences in academic ability in core
subjects.”

Results

According to Marcotte, the schooling and work decisions of men and
women are shaped by different
influences; thus, he estimated the
regression models separately by

gender. He found that “on average,
young men who enrolled in a community or technical college earned
approximately 5.1% more annually
for each year of full-time equivalent
coursework completed, even though
no degree was obtained.” As far as
the returns to the receipt of a degree
are concerned, the author estimated
that “men who obtained an associate degree earn about 12.2% more
annually…than their high school
educated peers.” His further analysis determined that the “observed
relationship between enrollment in
community colleges and labor market earnings is in large part the result
of relatively more employment hours
for workers who attended community college.”
The author also found that compared
with young men, young women
had larger returns to enrollment in
and degrees from community colleges. For instance, he estimated that
“women who earn associate degrees
earn about 45.8% more annually…
than similar high school educated
women.” Marcotte pointed out that
the gender differences in returns “to
postsecondary education suggest
there are important differences in the
educational and/or economic experiences of young men and women.”
He suggested that this might be due
to the fact that “women who enroll
in postsecondary education more
commonly enroll in programs that
provide training for occupations
where postsecondary study is particularly important. For example, in
the context of community colleges, a
common major for women is in nursing or other health fields…” Men,
however, “may be more likely to
enroll in occupational programs for
which work experience or apprenticeship might be better substitutes,
such as electronics or automotive
technology.”
The author was less successful in iso-

lating the returns to academic versus
occupational credits. He observed
that since most community college
students take a mix of both types of
courses, “the substantial correlation
between academic and occupational
credits earned makes it difficult to
identify whether enrollment in one
type of course or the other is particularly advantageous.”

Conclusions

Marcotte augmented our knowledge
of the economic benefit of a community college education. He found
“consistent evidence that average
wages and salaries for young women
and men who enroll in community
colleges and those who earned associate degrees are substantially higher
than their peers whose education
extends no further than high school.”
Moreover, the author determined
that the “most substantial earnings
benefits associated with community
college education, and postsecondary education in general, accrue to
women.” In light of the current economic conditions, one implication of
Marcotte’s findings is that “increases
in enrollment at community colleges,
regardless of whether they lead to a
degree, are likely to result in improved employment opportunities in
the future.”

Marvin M. Smith, Ph.D.,
Community Development Research Advisor
9

Workforce Development Partnership Serves
Both Employers and Employees
...continued from page 1

•

Help low- and moderate-income
employees and unemployed
residents to increase their skills
and access training in order to
obtain health-care positions and
advance in their careers (see
Career Pathways below for more
information).

In essence, the Training Fund has
two lines of business: 1) a standalone educational institution for
union members and community residents; and 2) an employer partnership that works directly with employers to meet their training needs.

In order to operate an effective sectoral workforce development program, it’s important to understand
the industry in detail. Employers
trust the Training Fund with data
and information, and the fund works
with employers to use this information to develop a strategy that meets
the employer’s needs.4
At present, 52 health-care employers in the Delaware Valley, primarily
hospitals and long-term care and behavioral health providers, work with
the fund’s staff to identify talent gaps
and develop training. The Train-

ing Fund has a staff of 35 full-time
and 50 part-time individuals and a
2010–2011 budget of $5.7 million.
The Training Fund has helped a total
of approximately 100,000 employees
to advance in their careers since the
fund’s inception. It is one of very few
organizations nationally that serve
nonunion residents,5 as well as union
members, and provide a full range of
services encompassing literacy and
workforce skills, training, education,
industry-recognized credentials, and
linkages to community colleges and
universities.

4
A multi-year study of the effectiveness of the sector approach has indicated positive findings in increased earnings, better benefits, and steadier employment. Sheila Maguire, Joshua Freely, Carol Clymer, et al., “Tuning In to Local Labor Markets: Findings from the Sectoral Employment Impact Study,”
Public/Private Ventures, 2010, available at http://www.ppv.org/ppv/publications/assets/325_publication.pdf.

Career Pathways Education Model

Source: Adapted by District 1199C Training & Upgrading Fund from a model provided by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Vocational and Adult Education and the U.S. Department of Labor

10

Credit: Harvey Finkle

Meeting of Health-Care Employers Convened on Workforce Issues
A health-care industry partnership formed by the District
1199C Training and Upgrading Fund (Training Fund) is
addressing emerging health-care issues and their impact on
training and human resources planning. The partnership,
called the Pennsylvania Partnership for Direct Care Workers, includes 70 employers, six colleges and universities, five
technical training programs operated by nonprofits, and nine
workforce development partners. The 70 employers include
18 employers or employer bargaining units that are not part
of the Training Fund. The term direct care workers refers to
semi-skilled to professional-level employees in nursing, allied health, behavioral health, and health information.
In 2010, the partnership convened a meeting of health-care
executives, government officials, and educators for a symposium on how best to prepare health-care and clerical employees for a transition from paper to computerized patient
records.
Shortly thereafter, the Training Fund developed a 30-week
course in which employees receive credentials in computer
proficiency and in creation of digital patient records, as well
as training in customer service and medical terminology. The
program has proven useful to both employers and employees.
This year, the Training Fund embarked on an important pilot
initiative with the Inglis Foundation in Philadelphia. Inglis
was concerned about turnover among its first-year nurse’s
aides and asked the Training Fund to collaborate on designing a three-week program of coursework and on-the-job
training at Inglis that goes beyond the state-required nurse’s
aide certification course. The partnership pays for the costs of
providing the three-week program as well as books, uniforms, supplies, and the licensing exam fee. Ten nurse’s aides
are currently taking the program.

Wilbur Lo, M.D., speaks at a training session on electronic medical
records organized by District 1199C’s Training and Upgrading Fund.
The Inglis Foundation has agreed to hire the aides if they
pass the licensing exam and the three-week course. The aides
have already taken the state-required course at the Training
Fund’s nonprofit privately licensed school. The Training Fund
plans to replicate this strategy of designing pre-employment
programs with other employers.
The partnership, established in 2005 with support from the
Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry, is funded
by the Job Opportunity Investment Network in Philadelphiaa
and the National Fund for Workforce Solutionsb and supported by the Philadelphia Workforce Investment Board.
–Cheryl Feldman, Executive Director, District 1199C Training and
Upgrading Fund, Philadelphia
a
b

Background

The Training Fund was established
as a labor–management partnership in 1974 through a trust agreement with nine founding employer
partners. The initial trust agreement

See www.joincollaborative.org.
See www.nfwsolutions.org.

established that the Training Fund
would address the workforce needs
of the health-care industry by helping health-care employers in the
region recruit and retain a highly
skilled workforce, while providing

education and training for incumbent as well as laid-off and unemployed community residents.6
The employers contribute 1.5 percent
of gross payroll for covered District

Employers that serve nonunion residents are viewed as good corporate citizens in their communities, since such residents may be able to get training
and positions through employer-supported workforce programs.

5

6
The employers agreed to contribute to an education trust fund through collective bargaining agreements with the Philadelphia Hospital and Health
Care Employees union, which is now part of the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees. The national union is an affiliate of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees.

11

1199C members into a pooled education trust fund that is governed by
the provisions of the Taft-Hartley Act
of 1947 and Employee Retirement
Income Security Act regulations. The
board of trustees consists of an equal
number of employer and labor representatives, with co-chairs representing each group. For the past 20 years,
the board co-chairs have been Henry
Nicholas, president of District 1199C
and of the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees,
and a representative of the Temple
University Health System.

Core Programs and Services

The Training Fund provides most of
its services at a 35,000-square-foot
learning center at 100 South Broad
Street, a central location for Philadelphia residents. Programs are also
offered at employers’ workplaces.
The Training Fund provides:
•

Professional vocational and
technical programs in nursing,
allied health, behavioral health,
and health information technology that enable participants to
pursue occupational goals;

•

Full-time and part-time programs that provide college
credit and lead to certificates
and degrees at area colleges and
universities;

•

Reading, math, and accelerated
academic skills contextualized
in health-care training materials,
work readiness, a high school
diploma program, and English
as a second language;

•

Employer-based customized
workforce and technical training
programs; and

•

Employment services in which
the fund’s staff refers prescreened candidates to more
than 100 health-care facilities.

The Training Fund provided or funded training for 3,557 individuals from
July 1, 2009, to June 30, 2010. Of this
number, approximately 50 percent
were union members and 50 percent
were nonunion community residents,
including laid-off employees, the
unemployed, and immigrants. Of the
3,557 individuals, nearly 80 percent
were female and 72 percent were
African American, 10 percent were
Caucasian, 8 percent were Hispanic,
3 percent were Asian, and the balance
was from other groups.
The Training Fund also provided an
additional 15,433 individuals with
skills assessment, career services,
and community services, such as tax
return assistance, during the 2009–
2010 fiscal year.
The Training Fund blends funds
from many public and private sources to operate its programs, which are
organized in two nonprofits, including an educational trust fund. For
example, it uses Workforce Investment Act (WIA) Title 1 funds to train
employees; WIA Title II funds to
teach employees reading, writing,
and math skills; and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families funds to
help low-income residents.
The Training Fund’s workforce
development programs are funded
largely by the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry, the U.S.
Department of Education, the U.S.
Department of Labor, the Pennsylvania Department of Education, the
Philadelphia Youth Network, the

Philadelphia Workforce Development Corporation, and the United
Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania,
as well as by foundations, course
tuition, and fee-for-service.
Work-Based Education
In one initiative, the Training Fund
created a work-based educational
model for entry-level mental health
workers of Temple University
Hospital’s Episcopal Campus and
the Philadelphia Health Management Corporation. A psychologist
at the University of Medicine and
Dentistry of New Jersey developed a
curriculum with on-the-job learning
assignments instead of traditional
classroom instruction.
Employees received wage increases
upon completion of training.
Employees who were trained at
Philadelphia University received 21
college credits toward an associate’s
degree. The initiative was funded by
the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Hitachi Foundation, and the
U.S. Department of Labor.7

Conclusion

Workforce development practitioners must find ways to use and
integrate programs that normally
function separately. For example, the
Training Fund has learned to closely
link workforce development and
literacy programs. Individual workforce development programs that
aren’t closely linked to employers,
the workforce development system,
and higher education often aren’t effective in and of themselves.
For information, contact Cheryl Feldman at 215-568-2220, ext. 5101,
or cfeldman@1199ctraining.org;
www.1199ctraining.org.

A report on the initiative by the Aspen Institute, titled “Findings from Research into Temple University Hospital-Episcopal Campus’s Work-Based
Learning Program for Mental Health Workers,” is available at http://www.aspenwsi.org/Publications/10-023.pdf.

7

12

A Federal Perspective on Workforce Development Issues
...continued from page 5

employees, and individuals experiencing prolonged unemployment.
OJT currently accounts for roughly
10 percent of all training performed
in the WIA Adult and Dislocated
Worker programs (there are separate
programs for adults and dislocated
employees). Reports show that
14,275 participants in the programs
received OJT services between July
2009 and June 2010. Based on performance data for that same period,
86 percent of adults who participated in OJT found employment,
compared with 67 percent of those
who received occupational training.
Similarly, 90 percent of the dislocated employees who completed OJT
found employment, compared with
74 percent of those who received occupational training. The OJT model
is more expensive than the counsel–
train–place model that is more common in the public workforce system,
but data suggest that OJT leads to
more job placements.
The ETA’s OJT national emergency

grant initiative led to 2,000 placements with several thousand more
placements expected over the course
of 2011.
Registered Apprenticeships
Registered apprenticeship programs
are another successful “earn and
learn” workforce development model
that combines on-the-job experience
and related academic and technical classroom instruction. This year
marks the 100th anniversary of the
first state apprenticeship law and the
75th anniversary of the passage of the
National Apprenticeship Act. Approximately 430,000 apprentices are
working in almost 1,000 occupations.
Registered apprenticeship programs
enable employers to develop a highly skilled workforce with industryrecognized credentials. Over 225,000
employers nationwide participate in
apprenticeship programs registered
with DOL or state apprenticeship
agencies. While there is a long-established partnership with the building
trades and construction industry,
registered apprenticeships, strengthened by regulations
issued in 2008, are
meeting the needs
of many different
industries, including health care,
information technology, advanced
manufacturing, and
industries using
green technologies.

Jessica Hill Vollmer, a registered apprentice with the Tennessee
Carpenters Regional Council Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee, demonstrates her carpentry skills.

Registered apprenticeships now have
the ability to offer
training focused on
very specific skill
competencies within

an industry. For example, registered
apprenticeship programs can provide
employees with interim credentials
prior to their attainment of the final
apprenticeship completion certificate.
For example, in a certified nursing
assistant apprenticeship, apprentices can earn interim credentials by
demonstrating competencies in such
areas as hospice and palliative care,
dementia, geriatrics, and disabilities.
Many apprentices also have the
opportunity to earn an associate’s
or bachelor’s degree in addition to
their industry-recognized credential.
A growing number of registered apprenticeship programs now work directly with many two- and four-year
colleges and universities to provide
technical classroom instruction. Additionally, employers are often willing to help pay the cost of tuition,
books, and other materials. One lesson learned from the recession is that
degrees and industry-recognized
credentials that are in demand give
greater protection against long-term
unemployment compared with not
having these credentials.
Registered apprenticeships are
extremely competitive and highly
sought after. This learning model,
with its contextual and hands-on
learning, is ideally suited to low-income individuals who have not been
successful in a traditional classroom
setting.4 Today more than ever,
we need a modernized, expanded
national apprenticeship system that
works in conjunction with workforce
and educational partners.
Work Experiences for Young People
During the recession, and to a large
extent over the past decade, young
people have encountered substantial
difficulties in obtaining employment
13

both during the summer months
and year round. The employment
rate of the nation’s 16- to 19-yearolds fell considerably during and
after the mild national economic
recession of 2001 and never came
close to regaining its pre-recession
peak during the job market recovery
from 2003–2007. Youth employment
then tumbled further during the recession of 2007–2009, reaching new
historical lows.5
Youth work experiences are structured learning experiences that take
place in a for-profit, nonprofit, or
public-sector workplace for a limited
period of time. Work experiences enable young people to gain exposure
to the working world and its requirements. Young people who work during their teens and early twenties are
more likely to work in later years.6
Through the WIA Youth Program,
states and local agencies and organizations can provide young people
with work experiences, including
summer employment opportunities
directly linked to academic and occupational learning, occupational skills
training, and leadership development
opportunities.
Some successful work experience
programs for young people integrate
basic education and remediation
with skills training in what is called

contextualized learning. Contextualization is a promising approach
that makes work a central context for
learning and helps students attain
work readiness skills.
Some of the more successful youth
programs are in high-growth industries, such as health care. Research
suggests that young people need to
be exposed to companies in a broad
range of industries.7 Their lack of
broad-based work exposure limits
their immediate and long-term job
prospects. Seventeen- to 20-year-olds
are concentrated in a few occupations and industries, such as food
service, stock handlers (primarily
in grocery stores), sales clerks and
newsboys, and employees in the
entertainment and recreation service
industry, according to Bureau of
Labor Statistics data.8
The WIA Youth Program provides
employment and education services
to eligible low-income individuals who are 14 to 21 years of age.
Between July 2009 and June 2010,
the program served 279,427 young
people with an annual appropriation of $924 million and an estimated
cost of $3,307 per participant. The
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 provided
an additional $1.2 billion in funds for
WIA Youth Program activities with a
strong emphasis on summer employ-

ment. Over 365,000 young people
participated in ARRA-funded work
experiences.

Conclusion

The Department of Labor recognizes
that these are not the times for onesize-fits-all workforce development
approaches. The ETA’s programs
are collaborative efforts with states
and local agencies and organizations
and critical business, education, and
nonprofit partners that understand
the particular needs of their local
economies. The ETA showcases best
practices and collaborative models
and provides technical assistance
to the ETA’s dual clients: businesses
and job seekers.
The ETA is always looking to add
new partners and improve its understanding of fresh approaches and
proven practices. If you have any
ideas on how the ETA can improve
its services and practices, you are
encouraged to contact the national
office or one of the ETA regional
offices in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago,
Dallas, Philadelphia, or San Francisco. The best way to accelerate our
recovery and build the best future
for America is to work together. Our
citizens deserve no less.
For information, contact Jane Oates at
oates.jane@dol.gov or 202-693-2700;
http://www.doleta.gov/.

4
See the 2008 report that was prepared for the Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board in the state of Washington, available at http://
www.wtb.wa.gov/Documents/wtr2008summary.pdf.

Andrew Sum, “The Collapse of the Nation’s Labor Market for Teens and Young Adults: Designing a Set of Workforce Development Strategies to
Improve the Immediate and Long-Term Employment Prospects of the Nation’s Youth,” Minneapolis, May 2009, available at http://www.northeastern.
edu/clms/wp-content/uploads/minneapolis_presentation.ppt.

5

Andrew Sum, Ishwar Khatiwada, and Sheila Palma, “Vanishing Work Among U.S. Teens, 2000–10: What A Difference a Decade Makes! Four Million
Missing Workers in June 2010,” Center for Labor Market Studies, Northeastern University, Boston, July 2010, available at http://tinyurl.com/3utqpm6.

6

Andrew Sum and Joseph McLaughlin, “Dire Straits for Many American Workers: The Economic Case for New Job Creation Strategies in 2010 for the
Nation’s Teens and Young Adults (20–24),” Center for Labor Market Studies, Northeastern University, Boston, July 2010, available at http://www.nyec.
org/content/documents/DireStraitsfortheNation’sTeensandYoungAdults.pdf.

7

8

See the BLS report “Seasonal and Sectoral Patterns in Youth Employment,” available at http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2000/04/art2full.pdf.

14

The Collapse of the Labor Market for 16- to 24-Year-Olds
...continued from page 7

at least one remedial class is often
reported as well over 50 percent.5
With their origins as two-year transfer institutions, community colleges
often offer a curricular mix that is
heavily weighted toward remedial
and general academic courses. Despite this, a surprisingly large share
of those who complete community
college programs do so in occupationally oriented fields of study, such
as health, information technology,
and business-related fields, that
are closely tied to the labor market.
However, these programs are both
expensive to operate and are selective in student admission. Yet their
links to the labor market make them
important pathways to success for
young people too often disconnected
from the world of work.
Unfortunately, for a variety of academic, personal, and institutional
reasons, including much lower funding levels for community colleges,
many community college–bound
students do not persist to completion
and drop out of school without any
postsecondary credentials. However,
for those students who are able to
complete a course of study, the gains
to earning a degree can be quite substantial.6 But most of the labor market gains to enrolling in a community college appear to be associated
with completing a degree or, in some
instances, completing a long-term
certificate program as well as gaining
access to employment in occupations
appropriate for college graduates;7

enrolling in a community college but not
earning a degree yields
little net benefit in the
labor market.

Challenges Faced
by Urban Teens and
Young Adults

Young adults in the
nation’s urban areas
consistently have very
poor connections to
A student receives training in plumbing, one of the vocational
the job market, and
programs in construction trades at Shawsheen Valley Technithe Great Recession
cal High School in Billerica, MA. The school, which opened in
has further weakened
1970, has a population of more than 1,300 students.
these connections. For
example, even before the onset of
from 13 percent in 2006–07.
the Great Recession, Philadelphia
teens had very low rates of particiLarge declines in teen labor force
pation in the labor market. During
participation, combined with sharp
2006–07, only 36 out of every 100
increases in the teen unemployment
Philadelphia teens were actively
rate, have resulted in woefully low
participating in the labor market by
levels of employment among Philaeither working or actively looking
delphia’s teens. In 2006–07 before
for work. By 2009–10, the labor force
the start of the most recent recession,
participation rate among the city’s
only 31 percent of the city’s teens
teens had sharply declined to just 27
were employed. The Great Recession
percent (see chart on next page).
further reduced employment opportunities for this age group. In 2009–
Among the city’s teens who did par10, only 18 out of every 100 teens in
ticipate in the labor market, the likePhiladelphia were employed, prolihood of finding a job was quite low
viding clear evidence of a collapse in
before the recession and dropped
the teen labor market in the city.
sharply during the recession. The
unemployment rate among PhiladelThe findings — not just for Philadelphia teens more than doubled durphia, but for the nation as a whole
ing the Great Recession. In 2009–10,
— reveal a very serious and growing
33 percent of all teens who opted to
problem of teen disconnection from
remain in the much shrunken teen
the job market, leaving new high
labor force were unemployed, up

Bailey found that in a sample of 250,000 first-time community college students about 60 percent took one development course. See Thomas Bailey,
“Rethinking Developmental Education in Community Colleges,” Community College Research Brief, Columbia University, February 2009, available at
http://tinyurl.com/3hhu6jy.

5

6
Marsha Silverburg, Elizabeth Warner, Michael Fong, and David Goodwin, “National Assessment of Vocational Education: Final Report to Congress,”
U.S. Department of Education, Washington D.C., June 2004, available at http://www2.ed.gov/rschstat/eval/sectech/nave/naveexesum.pdf.

Neeta P. Fogg and Paul E. Harrington, “Rising Mal Employment and the Great Recession: The Growing Disconnection Between Recent College Graduates and the College Labor Market,” Continuing Higher Education Review, forthcoming.

7

15

Labor Market Outcomes of Teen Residents
in Philadelphia

Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Current Population Survey, Monthly Public Use Data Files,
various years, tabulations by the Center for Labor Markets and Policy, Drexel University

school graduates with the choice of
either postsecondary enrollment or
idleness, with little chance of starting
a career that further develops skills
through the job market. Education
strategy in the United States seems almost exclusively focused on postsecondary enrollment after high school,
with little consideration to connecting
new high school graduates to career
employment opportunities.

The Need for More Career and
Technical Education Programs

For many young people, however,
college has not proven to be a solid
pathway to success and increasingly looks like a “one-size-fits-all”
solution. Secondary schools need to
determine how to connect with employers and convince them that their
graduates are worthy of hiring. To
do this, these schools must develop
career and technical education (CTE)
programs at the secondary level that
are closely tied to the job market.

Well-organized CTE programs at the
secondary level provide students
with a focus on learning that is connected to developing career skills
that are valued by employers.8
Dating back to the late 1960s, but
substantially re-organized as a result
of education reform and high stakes
testing in recent years, the best CTE
programs are delivered at secondary
schools that are organized as independent high schools with a single
focus on occupational and career
education. Students attend classes
in their field of study or “shop” that
are organized to better integrate academic and occupational skills development; therefore, these programs
provide a real-world context for
students to develop their academic
skills — especially reading, writing,
and math — alongside their occupational proficiencies. Moreover, these
institutions have very strong links
to the local labor markets, which are

often based on employer advisory
committees developed for each shop
at the school. These committees
help guide curriculum decisions
and equipment purchases and are
frequently important sources of jobs
for new graduates. The evidence
suggests that schools organized in
this fashion generate strong positive
outcomes for their graduates.9
Massachusetts has developed what
some observers have characterized
as the “Cadillac” version of CTE programs. This model secondary education program was in part spurred by
education reform efforts in the early
1990s. The CTE system responded
to reform and high stakes testing
by integrating academic and occupational activities in high schools
exclusively dedicated to a CTE curriculum. The high schools that have
CTE programs are organized to offer
a wide range of occupational choices,
often 15 to 20 major fields of study.
The curriculum seeks to integrate
academic and occupational learning in a given trade and focuses on
developing skills that can be used in
the job market.
Many students in their junior and
senior years participate in paid cooperative educational programs that
provide them with additional training-related work experience. After
their freshman year, students rotate
through six different shops as part of
a career exploration effort, and then
they choose an occupational area
of specialization (e.g., auto repair,
graphic design, or medical assistant)
and develop academic, occupational,
and behavioral proficiencies in a
contextual setting.
The 10th grade English language

For a review of alternative career pathways for young adults, see “Pathways to Prosperity: Meeting the Challenge of Preparing Young Americans
for the 21st Century,” Pathways to Prosperity Project, Harvard Graduate School of Education, February 2011, available at http://www.tinyurl.
com/6g3mg8y.

8

See Neeta P. Fogg, Paul E. Harrington, and Andrew M. Sum, “The Impact of Vocational Programs on the Labor Market Outcomes of High School
Students,” Center for Labor Market Studies, Northeastern University, Boston, and “Pathways to Prosperity: Meeting the Challenge of Preparing Young
Americans for the 21st Century.”

9

16

proficiency scores skyrocketed as
secondary CTE programs moved to
the integrated academic occupational
models. In 2003, just 35 percent of
CTE students scored at a proficient
or advanced level on the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment
System test that many consider to be
the most rigorous high stakes test in
the country, with most of the remainder passing with a low “needs improvement.” By 2010, however, the
share of Massachusetts CTE students
scoring at the proficient or advanced
level rose to 71 percent. Similarly,
large improvements were made in
the fraction achieving proficient/
advanced scores in math. Indeed, by
2010, the large gap that existed in
2003 in the test scores between CTE
students and those enrolled at traditional comprehensive high schools
had been considerably reduced.
Moreover, these CTE schools accomplished this gain in test scores as
their four-year graduation rate rose
to 90 percent, indicating that these
schools were able to raise test scores
while reducing dropout rates (see
Table 2).
These gains were not the result
of enrolling elite students. In fact,
the share of CTE students who are
learning disabled or have some other
kind of disability is nearly 50 percent
greater than those of other secondary
schools, and these schools have much
higher fractions of educationally
disadvantaged students than other
schools. Moreover, unlike the programs at comprehensive schools, for
years Massachusetts CTE programs
have tracked their students into the
job market and into postsecondary
education. Most graduates have transitioned into training-related placements or higher education programs.

Conclusion

Higher education is clearly an important alternative for many high

Table 2: Trends in Massachusetts Secondary High Stakes Test Score
Proficiency Levels and Graduation Rates, 2003–2010
All Secondary
Schools

CTE Secondary
Schools

2003

2010

2003

2010

10th Grade English Language Arts
Scoring Proficient or Advanced

61%

78%

35%

71%

10th Grade Math Scoring Proficient
or Advanced

51%

75%

27%

69%

Graduation Rate

80%

82%

84%

90%

Source: Massachusetts Department of Education, School Reports, downloaded July 2011

school graduates, but it is too often
the only pathway to employment for
young people, especially in our cities.
We need to rebuild these pathways
— starting at the high school level
— so that students develop not just
academic competencies, but occupational and behavioral traits as well,
because these qualities are valued by
employers. This task is not a trivial
one. The decision by an employer to
hire a new employee is a difficult one.
Employers have a great deal of difficulty assessing candidates. Résumés
and interviews are not very good
predictors of future productivity. In
addition, references from other employers and teachers are often considered unreliable by employers.10
The labor market is a social institution fraught with all the pitfalls of
human personality and behavior. Yet
when employers seek to hire workers who can contribute to productivity in their organization, they must
not only have information about the
knowledge skills and abilities that
the job candidate has developed, but
they must also have some reasonable
understanding that the new hire will
possess the personality and behavioral traits that fit into the norms of a
given workplace.
This means that these high schools
must build long-term relationships
with a variety of employers; in ad-

dition, these schools must develop
reputations as being solid and reliable sources for providing entry-level
workers in specific occupational
areas. These relationships between individual employers and shop teachers, high school job developers, and
frequently high school senior management must be built on trust. This
trust is based on the school’s knowledge of the hiring requirements
of firms and on the firms’ general
understanding of the capabilities of
the graduates from the high school.
Rebuilding high school connections
to the job market is not a simple
task. It will take considerable investments of capital to build an effective, modern-day CTE program and
recruit faculty capable of teaching
in a context that integrates academic
and occupational instruction. But
of equal importance, it means that
high schools need to work to build
long-term relationships with local
employers — one firm at a time — to
rebuild the trust that is at the center
of virtually any program that transitions individuals into the job market.
For information, contact Neeta P. Fogg
at 215-895-2200 or fogg@drexel.edu, or
Paul E. Harrington at 215-571-3855
or paul.e.harrington@drexel.edu; http://
www.drexel.edu/provost/clmp/index.
html.

James Rosenbaum, “Do Students Understand What College Demands?” Beyond College for All: Career Pathways for the Forgotten Half. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2001.

10

17

Workforce Development Resources
By Jeno Pizarro, Community Development Intern

The following reading list of research studies, articles, and tools has been compiled for Cascade readers who want to learn more about
workforce development issues and strategies.
General Information
Haralson, Lyn E. “What Is Workforce Development?” Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis Bridges (Spring 2010), available at
http://www.stlouisfed.org/publications/br/articles/?id=1953.
This article introduces the topic of workforce development and
discusses how its different definitions can be integrated into one
comprehensive perspective.
Seymonds, William C., Robert B. Schwartz, and Ronald
Ferguson. “Pathways to Prosperity: Meeting the Challenge of
Preparing Young Americans for the 21st Century,” Harvard
Graduate School of Education (February 2011), available at
http://tinyurl.com/6g3mg8y.
This report explains the reasons the United States has failed to
adequately prepare many young adults for the labor force and offers
a vision of how the United States could regain its former leadership
position in educational attainment.
Postsecondary Education
Carnevale, Anthony P., and Stephen J. Rose. “The Undereducated American,” Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce (June 2011), available at http://cew.
georgetown.edu/undereducated/.
This report maintains that for decades the United States has been
under-producing employees with postsecondary educations. An additional 20 million such employees are needed in the next 15 years
to meet the economy’s need for skilled labor and reduce income
inequality.
English, Ed. “Cap in Hand: The High Price of Higher Education,” Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta EconSouth (Spring
2011), pp. 7–10, available at http://www.frbatlanta.org/
documents/pubs/econsouth/11q1.pdf.
The cost of postsecondary education is soaring, making the attainment of a degree out of reach for many people. What is behind
tuition inflation and can its trajectory be altered?
Jenkins, Davis, and Monica Reid Kerrigan. “Faculty and
Administrator Data Use at Achieving the Dream Colleges:
A Summary of Survey Findings,” Columbia University
Teachers College (February 2009), available at http://ccrc.
tc.columbia.edu/Publication.asp?uid=671.
This article summarizes the findings from a study that examined
the specific data used by faculty and administrators at Achieving the Dream colleges and the extent to which they use data to
improve programs. There are 160 Achieving the Dream colleges
that seek to improve higher education for low-income and minority
students.
Jenkins, Davis, Shanna Smith Jenkins, and Josipa Roska.
“Promoting Gatekeeper Course Success Among Community College Students Needing Remediation: Findings and
Recommendations from a Virginia Study (Summary Re18

port),” Columbia University Teachers College (November
2009), available at http://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/publication.
asp?UID=714.
This study examines student characteristics and course-taking
patterns that are associated with higher probabilities that remedial
students pass college-level math and English.
Kazis, Richard. “Community Colleges and Regional Recovery: Strategies for State Action,” Brookings Institution (May
2011), available at http://tinyurl.com/3u6stmf.
In order to prepare for long-term, sustainable economic growth,
states should align workforce development, postsecondary education, and economic development efforts while targeting sectors
critical to regional competitiveness.
Smith Jaggars, Shanna, and Di Xu. “Online Learning in the
Virginia Community College System,” Columbia University
Teachers College (September 2010), available at http://ccrc.
tc.columbia.edu/publication.asp?uid=813.
This study examines the patterns of online versus face-to-face
courses with regard to retention, performance, and subsequent
educational outcomes.
Wachen, John, Davis Jenkins, and Michelle Van Noy. “How
I-BEST Works: Findings from a Field Study of Washington
State’s Integrated Basic Education and Skills Training Program,” Columbia University Teachers College (September
2010), available at http://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/publication.
asp?UID=806.
The I-BEST program is a strategy to increase the rate at which
adult remedial students enter and succeed in postsecondary occupational education. Remedial instructors and technical faculty jointly
design and teach courses.
High School Partnerships
Kerrigan, Monica Reid, and Doug Slater. “Collaborating to
Create Change: How El Paso Community College Improved
the Readiness of Its Incoming Students Through Achieving
the Dream,” Columbia University Teachers College (March
2010), available at http://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/publication.
asp?uid=754.
El Paso Community College has implemented a number of high
school interventions aimed at boosting student success and decreasing the need for remedial courses.
Somoza, Lela. “Putting It All Together for a Better Future,”
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Partners in Community
and Economic Development, 21:1 (2011), pp. 2–7, available at
http://tinyurl.com/3bshq5b.
When high school graduation rates in Carroll County, Georgia,
began to falter, one local business decided to create a program for
at-risk high school students to ensure it had an educated labor pool
for the future.

Disadvantaged Populations
Heinrich, Carolyn J., and Harry Holzer. “Improving Education and Employment for Disadvantaged Young Men: Proven
and Promising Strategies,” Urban Institute (May 2010), available at http://tinyurl.com/3ruhc93.
This article reviews rigorously evaluated strategies aimed at helping disadvantaged youth complete postsecondary education and
improve employment prospects.
Holzer, Harry J. “Workforce Development as an Antipoverty
Strategy: What Do We Know? What Should We Do?” Urban
Institute (October 2008), available at http://www.urban.org/
publications/411782.html.
Skills have never been more important in the workforce; however,
public dollars spent on workforce development are declining. This
paper examines funding trends and the cost effectiveness of various
workforce development programs.
Maguire, Sheila, Joshua Freely, and Carol Clymer. “Tuning
In to Local Labor Markets,” Public/Private Ventures (2009),
available at http://tinyurl.com/26lpesz.
Do mature sector-focused programs result in significant labor
market gains for low-income, disadvantaged workers? Public/Private Ventures launched the Sectoral Employment Impact Study to
examine this question.
Workforce Development in the Future
Giloth, Robert P. “Lessons for a New Context: Workforce
Development in an Era of Economic Challenge,” Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Community Investments (Spring
2011), available at http://tinyurl.com/3veofpl.
This article discusses changes in workforce development since the
1990s and the need to integrate workforce development in public
and private investments in infrastructure, transportation, health
care, and energy.
Melnik, Mark, Barry Bluestone, and Alan Clayton-Matthews.
“Needed Skills Versus Available Skills: An Assessment Tool
Is Launched,” Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Communities &
Banking (Winter 2009), available at http://tinyurl.com/3dla7zt.
The Labor Market Assessment Tool identifies the skills needed in
growth industries, enabling government agencies and schools to
tailor workforce development programs for future needs.

Uhalde, Ray. “Workforce Development That Supports Economic Development,” IEDC Economic Development Journal,
(Winter 2011), pp. 42-49, available at http://tinyurl.com/uhalde.
Future U.S. economic prosperity depends significantly upon the
education and skill level of our current and future workforce. This
paper maintains that workforce and economic development need to
be more closely aligned.
Tools

Data Analysis
American Human Development Project — Social Sciences
Research Council
http://measureofamerica.org/
This tool creates customized maps and charts using over 100 indicators for each state and congressional district.
Federal Reserve Economic Data — Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/
This comprehensive site provides over 30,000 U.S. national and
regional economic time series data on employment, business, and
many other topics. Data can be downloaded and graphed.
Map Your Community — Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
http://tinyurl.com/3cp3eeu
The Map Your Community tool allows users to create customized
maps, providing insight into current and historical economic and
demographic conditions. The interface was developed by PolicyMap
and is provided by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.

Job and Career Resources
CareerOneStop — U.S. Department of Labor and the State
of Minnesota
http://www.careeronestop.org/
CareerOneStop helps job seekers explore careers, investigate salary
and benefits information, explore education and training opportunities, plan job searches, write résumés and cover letters, and
prepare for job interviews. This site also provides links to workforce
and labor market information that contain local information.

New Book Probes American Mortgage System
The American Mortgage System: Crisis and Reform, published recently by the University of
Pennsylvania Press, focuses on the causes of the housing market collapse and proposes solutions
to prevent another mortgage meltdown.
The book was edited by Susan M. Wachter, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania and codirector of the Penn Institute for Urban Research, and Marvin M. Smith, community development
research advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. The book contains chapters based
on papers presented at the 2010 conference on “Rethink. Recover. Rebuild. Reinventing Older
Communities.”
Information on the book is available at http://www.upenn.edu/pennpress/book/14884.html.
19

CASCADE
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
100 N. 6th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106-1574

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Address SERVICE Requested

Calendar of Events
Homes Within Reach 2011

November 14–16, 2011, Hilton Harrisburg, Harrisburg, PA
The Housing Alliance of Pennsylvania’s annual conference includes training and workshops on rental housing, homelessness, HUD and USDA Rural Development programs, low-income housing tax credits, transitional housing, taxcredit preservation projects, transit-oriented development, and other housing issues. For details, go to http://www.
housingalliancepa.org/.

Reinventing Older Communities

May 9–11, 2012, Hyatt Regency Philadelphia at Penn’s Landing
The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s Community Development Studies and Education Department will host
its fifth biennial Reinventing Older Communities conference. The Reinventing conferences are typically attended by
policymakers, community developers, bankers, researchers, funders, planners, and government representatives. For
information, contact Erin Mierzwa at erin.mierzwa@phil.frb.org.

20

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