Job Training That Gets ResultsTen Principles of Effective Employment ProgramsMichael Bernick,Introductory chapter | Table of Contents
“With fresh insights gleaned from decades of experience, Michael Bernick addresses the human-capital challenge of preparing low-wage workers for the global economy. His realistic focus on incentives provides a road map for future policy.” Job training continues to pose big challenges for workforce policymakers and practitioners as the twenty-first century takes root. For instance, while governments have genuinely improved the effectiveness of job training activities by making them more market-oriented, and while employment among welfare recipients has surged as a result of reforms enacted during the 1990s, labor-market success among the disabled and low-wage populations continues to lag. Recognizing that training programs can’t be all things to all people, Michael Bernick, a former director of California’s Employment Development Department (EDD), sets out to show the types of training programs that do work and to describe for whom they work. He identifies ways to improve performance among Workforce Investment Act (WIA) contractors while exploring the best uses for state discretionary WIA funds. He also describes what it takes to make an effective career ladder program, how postemployment welfare retention or skill advancement programs can succeed, and the type of training that workers with disabilities must go through to get and retain jobs. Bernick organizes the operational and policy lessons he learned from his five-year tenure as EDD director (and for more than 25 years in the job training field) into “Ten Principles." These principles, enlightened by the successes and failures of several training programs implemented in California before, during, and since his stint as EDD director, are aimed at policymakers and professionals who administer training programs in both the private and the public sector. Those principles are
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| While Bernick addresses a broad range of programs aimed at multiple segments of the population, his principles and policy prescriptions are guided by one defining element: that a system of government programs, even when well-structured, will reach only a small percentage of the unemployed and low-wage workforce, regardless of how much money is spent. Therefore, he says, policymakers need to rationalize the incentive structures of government programs while giving a greater role to innovative extragovernmental networks. |
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273 pp. 2005. $40 cloth ISBN 0-88099-281-6 / ISBN-13 978-0-88099-281-7 $20 paper ISBN 0-88099-280-8 / ISBN-13 978-0-88099-283-0 Shopping Cart OperationsFor MasterCard/Visa holders, accumulate titles in the Shopping Cart and submit your order electronically.
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