Look Beyond the Now When Considering Workforce Priorities
Industrial site selectors must consider not only a prospective location’s current labor pool but also its recruiting reach and unanticipated future demands and costs of a particular market.
Industrial site selectors must consider not only a prospective location’s current labor pool but also its recruiting reach and unanticipated future demands and costs of a particular market.
In honor of National Apprenticeship Week 2023, this post offers key takeaways about the barriers to scaling earn-and-learn opportunities.
Once considered mostly a path for the building trades, today’s apprenticeships are beginning to encompass a wider variety of industries that have notably struggled to fill jobs, including education and health care. Apprenticeships are also demonstrating the potential to prepare workers for the most in-demand jobs of tomorrow in fields like technology, space, and climate resilience.
In the coming decades, as the pace of technological change continues to increase, millions of workers may need to be not just upskilled but reskilled—a profoundly complex societal challenge that will sometimes require workers to both acquire new skills and change occupations entirely.
Can Florida's Workforce Support Future Defense and Homeland Security Cluster Growth?
Up and Coming opportunity markets identified including 25 smaller markets with strong growth potential.
While the unprecedented skilled labor shortage this country is experiencing creates challenges for employers across industries, it also creates a unique opportunity to further drive inclusion in the workplace by becoming disability-friendly.
A French conglomerate is investing $235 million to double gypsum capacity in Putnam County.
The federal government is doubling down on what it sees as a promising solution to teacher shortages: investing tens of millions of dollars into expanding registered apprenticeship programs for teachers.
The emergence of prestigious “degree apprenticeships” in the United Kingdom has implications for the future of higher ed in the U.S., Joe E. Ross writes.