Authors: Alan Lesgold, Michael J. Feuer, Allison M. Black, Board on Testing and Assessment, National Research Council
ISBN-13: 9780309063654, ISBN-10: 0309063655
Format: Paperback
Publisher: National Academies Press
Date Published: September 1997
Edition: (Non-applicable)
The dramatic shift in the American labor market away from manufacturing and the growing gap in earnings between high school and college graduates have contributed to a sense of alarm about the capacity of the nation's schools to supply adequately skilled graduates to the work force. The role that schools can or should play in preparing people to enter the world of work is hotly debated. In an effort to nurture the important and ongoing national dialogue on these issues, the Board on Testing and Assessment asked researchers and policymakers to engage in an interdisciplinary review and discussion of available data and implications for assessment policy.
Transitions in Work and Learning considers the role of assessment in facilitating improved labor market transitions and life-long learning of American workers. It addresses the apparent mismatch between skill requirements of high-performance workplaces and skills acquired by students in school, the validity of existing assessment technologies to determine skills and competencies of persons entering various occupations, and ethical and legal issues in the implementation of new testing and certification programs. The book also examines the role of assessment in determining needed skills; developing ongoing education and training; and providing information to employers, prospective workers, and schools.
Comprising the proceedings of the March 1996 conference organized by the Board on Testing and Assessment, the Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, and the National Research Council, this volume contains twelve contributions dealing with the problem of preparing prospective workers to be productive. Topics include the infamous "knowledge gap," assessment, testing, and possibilities for the future. No index. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
1 | Introduction | 1 |
2 | Is There a Gap Between Employer Skill Needs and the Skills of the Work Force? | 6 |
3 | Skills and the Economy: An Employer Context for Understanding the School-to-Work Transition | 34 |
4 | Should Social Skills Bc in the Vocational Curriculum? Evidence from the Automotive Repair Field | 62 |
5 | Manufacturing the New Worker: Literate Activities and Working Identities in a High-Performance Versus a Traditionally Organized Workplace | 89 |
6 | Twenty-First Century Measures for Twenty-First Century Work | 136 |
7 | Postmodern Test Theory | 180 |
8 | Legal Restrictions on Assessments | 200 |
9 | Assessment Without Adverse Impact | 215 |
10 | What Policy Makers and Experts See (and Do Not See) in School-to-Work Transitions | 235 |
11 | Getting to Work: Thoughts on the Function and Form of the School-to-Work Transition | 249 |
12 | Transitions in Work and Learning | 264 |
Appendix | Conference Agenda | 281 |