By Liz Weiss
This article was published by the Center for American Progress.
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Women can obtain better jobs and self-sufficient wages through postsecondary education, including job training and formal career pathways, and career development in high-wage, high-demand occupations, including occupations that are nontraditional for women. A key ingredient in obtaining a job with family-sustaining wages is a minimum of one year of education after high school. Education and training will allow women to move up in position and pay rather than become stuck in dead-end jobs. A workforce development system that fails to prepare women for higher-paying jobs, especially jobs nontraditional for women, means women will be paid less and receive fewer employment benefits such as health insurance and retirement savings programs.Yet the kinds of postsecondary education and training needed for women and men to build skills and increase earnings are not often achieved through participation in WIA programs. Currently, less than 16 percent of female WIA “exiters” receive training, and less than one percent enter into jobs that are nontraditional for women.Workforce Investment Boards must be intentional about working with women and overcoming longstanding barriers and discrimination.Further, research shows that employment in “middle-skill” jobs will remain significant (40 percent to 45 percent of hiring) today and in the next decade—jobs that require some postsecondary education beyond high school but less than a bachelor’s degree, such as auto mechanics, truck and bus drivers, carpenters, and computer support specialists, along with jobs in the health sector. Combining women’s need for postsecondary education with the national economic need for enough skilled workers to fill so many openings would benefit workers and employers alike.WIA programs can and should serve as a bridge between the labor market and postsecondary education, and they should help catalyze career development for women. Further, women—and other disadvantaged groups—have specific needs that must be recognized and addressed if they are to enter good, higher-paying jobs. Improvements in five areas would make WIA programs stronger to better ensure women workers can obtain the skills, education, and types of jobs they need to support themselves and their families. Specifically, WIA programs should incorporate:
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- A proactive approach to improving gender equity in participation and outcomes
- Career development through case management, supportive services, and outreach
- A renewed emphasis on postsecondary education and training
- Improved use of financial assistance mechanisms
- Better performance measures to ensure the workforce development system does what works.
Download the executive summary (pdf)
Download the report to mobile devices and e-readers from Scribd
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