Jobs, Capabilities and the New Digital Divide

UV Letter - Volume II, #23

If the presidential election was about one thing, it was jobs. A few numbers stand out from the campaign: 23 million unemployed, an unemployment rate that has remained over 7% since the last election, and finally 3.7 million unfilled jobs.

America remains exceptional in many ways, but unfilled jobs is not one of them. Other countries fare as poorly or worse in identifying and preparing workers to meet the needs of employers. According to a survey earlier this year of over 38,000 employers in 41 countries, 34% of companies worldwide reported finding it hard to fill open positions. In the survey by Manpower, the recruitment firm, Japan leads the world at 81%. Brazil is at 71%. Then Australia at 50% and the U.S. at 49%. Not surprisingly, a survey of 302 employers conducted in 2010 by Hart Research concluded that only one in four U.S. employers think that colleges and universities are doing a good job preparing students for the workplace.

If you ask, employers are more than happy to provide a laundry list of capabilities that students lack. Employers have a set of expected or target capabilities that are not being met. The list of macro-capabilities is, in rough order of priority: better written communication skills; better verbal communication skills; critical thinking; and complex problem solving. For the most difficult positions to fill – skilled trades, sales representatives and engineers (a position 88% of American companies report as somewhat or very difficult to fill) – employers have sets of micro-capabilities that go wanting.

Students need to up their game to meet these target capabilities. How should we think about this challenge? The literature of performance management is clear: the key to transforming actual behaviors to target behaviors is to set short-term goals as milestones on the road to the target, and then accurately and regularly document progress. If milestones are met, keep going. If they’re not being met, try new and different approaches. Rinse and repeat.

Failure to improve capability alignment between students and employers will create harm and hardship for both. But universities will be the ones held to account. This is particularly true because we now have the means to define, document and track capabilities, and the lion’s share of that can be done by universities.

Transcripts, curricula and job descriptions seem like unrelated documents, but they’d be a lot more useful if they were intricately related. At present, there is little connection. Online career sites such as Monster have job postings with employer descriptions and job requirements. Yet bland banner ads directing job seekers to a business degree aren’t helping anyone. As we described in a prior letter, transcripts should document actual capabilities and for graduates, reflect the capabilities a graduate of that program should be expected to demonstrate (based on the learning outcomes associated with each course). Meanwhile, job descriptions should detail what capabilities a position requires.

Relating transcripts and curricula to job descriptions will require bottoming all on the same taxonomy – a taxonomy of capabilities. This means that universities and employers agree on a standard set of thousands of capabilities that can be applied equally to learning outcomes, courses, degree programs, and job descriptions.

The taxonomy will be most effective when individuals are able to view their portfolio of capabilities in real time and compare them to the target capabilities prescribed by employers for their ideal jobs. Then they’ll be able to choose the courses or programs that should help them most efficiently and effectively transform their actual capabilities into target capabilities. And they’ll be able to track their progress, by semester, by month, or even more frequently.

If adopted broadly across higher education and the economy, a taxonomy of capabilities has the potential to fill unfilled jobs and generally improve the productivity of labor. As productivity gains derived from technology adoption decline, this is one area where we will make up lost ground.

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Sounds great, right? The challenge is putting it into practice and doing so at scale. The only plausible path requires technology: making the taxonomy of capabilities a metadata standard, tagging every learning outcome, course, program and job description; and making all documents – transcripts, curricula, and job descriptions – machine readable.

While it is far-fetched to imagine a university tagging learning outcomes, curricula and transcripts with capabilities metadata (and making these documents machine readable) for its campus-based programs, it’s not hard to imagine some beginning to do so in the coming years with their online programs. Online programs already have these documents in digital format, and online competency-based programs like Western Governors and University Now point the way to capabilities metadata tagging.

As a result, we will see capability alignment between students and employers much sooner for students learning entirely online than for students learning on campus or through blended models. This will be the new digital divide: students learning online will have the ability to select more efficient and effective paths to transforming their actual capabilities to the target capabilities required by employers, and then to track their progress.

Online students will also have an advantage in being able to document their capabilities – not only in terms of the capabilities metadata attached to their online transcripts, but also in terms of online portfolios. As assessments and assignments will also be tagged with capabilities metadata, online students will have developed portfolios of work that demonstrate exactly the capabilities employers are seeking. So employers won’t have to take universities’ word for it. They’ll be able to see it for themselves. (Of course, this also help opens the door to new providers of education – it won’t have to be a brand-name or even accredited university if the capabilities-tagged work is visible to employers via an open portfolio.)

The new digital divide will segment higher education providers into jobs-focused and employer-friendly institutions (i.e., online) and traditional campus-based institutions. It will also further accelerate the adoption of online learning and result in online taking additional market share from campuses for both adult learners and traditional age students. Such is the transformative price higher education will pay to do a better job of transforming students into capable employees.

University Ventures (UV) is the premier investment firm focused exclusively on the global higher education sector. UV pursues a differentiated strategy of ‘innovation from within’. By partnering with top-tier universities and colleges, and then strategically directing private capital to develop programs of exceptional quality that address major economic and social needs, UV expects to set new standards for student outcomes and advance the development of the next generation of colleges and universities on a global scale.

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