YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
With the recent shifts in workforce through the “Great Resignation,” employers are experiencing the need for a broader school-to-work pipeline. Truth is, employers will always need employees with better employability skills. Likewise, schools want to graduate students with great communication, customer service and core competencies. Thus, the result is a symbiotic relationship of business and education.
Gov. Mike Parson in his State of the State address called for more business and school partnerships. The Missouri Board of Education identified workforce development as priority area for the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. The legislative priorities include “supporting policies focused on developing intrapersonal and interpersonal skills for students that build resilience and employability” and “requiring the use of an integrated advising system that connects career advising with academic support consistently across secondary and postsecondary institutions.”
School systems across Missouri are finding creative ways to partner with businesses to satisfy the needs of industry, nonprofits, governments and education.
Building blocks
Schools are responding in a few ways:
Students are not the only benefactors of business partnerships. Teachers gain from externships – place-based professional development opportunities for teachers to spend time in industry and learn through direct experiences. They obtain valuable insight into industry soft skills and the integration of skill-based education with traditional knowledge-based learning. Externships are a great way to grow relevant connections and bridges to successful ready skills.
Internships can be unpaid or paid; either way, the true payoff is the professional skills students learn. Internships work well on college scholarships and as beginning resume builders. Internships are typically a semester or two in length but reap long-term benefits. For some industry partners, apprenticeships are great for teaching specific work-ready skills and to begin a relationship with novice employees. There is a large movement toward apprenticeship and high school programs all over the country: The Texas Youth Apprenticeship Partnership, Career Launch Chicago and CareerWise in multiple states. Each program is trying to match student interest while creating a talent pipeline into industry.
Barriers and ROI
School districts are working to overcome natural barriers of background checks, privacy issues and proprietary concerns. As Ozark High School is expanding into the Ozark Innovation Center and the academy model, business partners are helping us work through these issues. We realize these partnerships serve as an economic engine. Solutions such as agreement forms, student “employee onboarding” and training play an important role in overcoming the challenges. Helping solidify a student’s career choice or narrowing interest is worth the collaboration.
School partnerships with nonprofits, governmental agencies and industry are a win for the community, but more importantly, for the student. The return on investment can be measured in student success, employer satisfaction and stronger community bonds.
Craig Carson is assistant superintendent of learning for Ozark R-VI Schools. He can be reached at craigcarson@ozarktigers.org.
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