What are skill standards?
How do skill standards benefit local workforce
development boards?
How do skill standards benefit employers?
How do skill standards benefit community and technical
colleges?
Who develops skill standards?
What is the Texas Skill Standards Board (TSSB)?
What role does the TSSB play?
What skill standards have been recognized?
What is the difference between Recognized and
Conditionally Recognized Skill Standards?
How are skill standards kept current?
How can you become involved?
What
are skill standards?
Skill standards tell us what a worker needs to know and
do on the job and how well he or she needs to perform
to succeed in the workplace. Skill standards define
both the work itself and the worker qualifications,
specifically the skills and knowledge required to
successfully perform the work.
How do skill
standards benefit local workforce development
boards?
Skill standards serve to evaluate the effectiveness of
community and technical colleges and other training
providers to develop training programs and establish
performance criteria for successful program completion.
By ensuring that training institutions use skill
standards, local workforce development boards can
motivate employers to hire well-prepared graduates of
these programs. Qualified job applicants lower
employers’ company training costs.
How do skill
standards benefit employers?
Skill standards identify the critical knowledge,
skills, and performance levels that employees need to
be successful in the workplace. Skill standards help
employers meet the challenge of being competitive
through ensuring that workers possess vital job-related
competencies. Through skill standards, employers can
communicate their skill requirements to education and
technical training providers. Providers can then design
and deliver programs that ensure graduates have the
skills that employers need. And by hiring graduates of
education and training programs built on
industry-developed skill standards, employers get the
job-ready workers they need – workers with
relevant skills, who can be productive and effective
and give a faster return on the employer’s
staffing investment.
How do
skill standards benefit community and technical
colleges?
As a community or technical college (CTC)
instructor, skill standards can help you address the
following kinds of questions:
-
How do you determine the content of your
technical program?
-
How do you know that you’re teaching
the current skills and knowledge that will get your
students jobs?
-
Do you have trouble getting local employers
to define specifically the skills and knowledge they
are looking for in employees—and how well
potential applicants must perform to get and keep a
job?
The purpose of skill standards is to document
the skills, knowledge and performance standards that
employers require in their workers and to communicate
that information to education and training providers,
such as community and technical colleges. Community and
technical colleges can then use the skill standards to
develop curriculum that meets the needs that employers
have identified.
Who develops skill
standards?
Industry groups lead skill standards development
efforts. Typically, an alliance or coalition of
employers recognizes the need to expand the pool of
qualified workers in their industry to meet current or
future hiring goals. Often, the organizing body for the
effort is the industry’s professional or trade
association. The front-line workers, those who actually
perform the job, and their immediate supervisors define
the skill standards.
What is
the Texas Skill Standards Board (TSSB)?
The TSSB is an advisory body comprised of 11 volunteers
representing business and industry, labor and
education, both secondary and post-secondary. It was
established by the Texas Legislature in 1995, and the
members are appointed by the Governor. Its charge is to
develop a statewide system of skill standards and
credentials for sub-baccalaureate occupations with
strong employment and earnings opportunities.
What role does the
TSSB play?
Skill standards are a tool for communicating industry
skill requirements to education and training providers.
The TSSB acts as a liaison between employers who
develop skill standards and educators and trainers who
use them. First, the TSSB convenes industry groups to
develop skill standards according to criteria for
content and procedural validity and then grants
statewide recognition to standards that meet the
criteria. Second, the TSSB disseminates and promotes
the use of skill standards among education and training
providers.
What skill
standards have been recognized?
All TSSB-recognized skill standards are posted in the
Texas Skill Standards
Repository of this web site.
What is the
difference between Recognized and Conditionally Recognized Skill
Standards?
TSSB skill standards fall into two categories:
Recognized or Conditionally Recognized. The
“Recognized” category is granted to skill
standards developed and validated in Texas by Texas
industry and formatted into the seven specific elements
required for TSSB recognition: critical work functions,
key activities, performance criteria, occupational
skills and knowledge, occupational conditions, academic
and employability skills and knowledge, statements of
assessment. This category applies primarily to skill
standards developed by Texas industry. The
“Conditionally Recognized” category is
granted to skill standards developed and validated by
industry somewhere other than Texas, such as skill
standards developed by a national group that conducts a
rigorous development and validation process. The
resulting skill standards may or may not include all
seven skill standards elements described above.
The two categories of recognition simply
distinguish the two types of skill standards.
Conditional Recognition does not indicate a lesser or
temporary status. Standards in either category have
been “fully” recognized, are equal in
value, and are valid, reliable and representative of
the work they describe.
How are
skill standards kept current?
All recognized skill standards must be reviewed and
their content either validated or updated at least once
every five years. As occupations change in response to
business and technological advances, skill standards
need to change. When the industry group applies for
TSSB recognition of the skill standards, it submits a
review and update plan and time line. The plan
indicates how often the skill standards should be
reviewed to ensure that they are still representative
of the work they describe.
How can you get
involved?
Employers can become involved by developing skill
standards, participating on an Industry Technical
Advisory Committee to oversee the skill standards
development process, requesting TSSB conditional
recognition for existing skill standards developed
outside of the State of Texas, hiring from
TSSB-recognized programs that teach to the skill
standards, or by promoting skill standards’ use
among education and training providers.
Community and technical colleges can become
involved by integrating skill standards into
curriculum. The TSSB will recognize such programs and
post them on the TSSB website, and also provide a
gold-embossed “TSSB-Recognized” seal to
place on the credential of every graduate of the
program. |