Conference Sketch

By Marc Verhoeve

The 2004 Ontario School Counsellors Association Conference

The Ontario School Counsellors’ Association is a professional association which represents almost 1,780 elementary and secondary school counsellors and associate members. This year’s annual conference took place on November 7 to 9, 2004, at the Doubletree International Hotel on Toronto. The conference, entitled “Polishing the Many Facets of Guidance”, was the venue for over 400 counsellors and 58 exhibitors.

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Practitioner’s Corner

By Riz Ibrahim

Aids in Africa: the Impact of the Pandemic on the Concept of Career Development – Some Impressions

It was a long train ride from Dar es Salaam in Tanzania to Lusaka in Zambia. The first stretch of the journey on the Tazara (Tanzanian-Zambian Railway) line was relatively fast and comfortable – we travelled through the unfolding East African savannah and hugged the Great Rift Valley.

We were oblivious to the development challenges of this country as natural beauty abounded. It was a different story after we left the Tanzanian border stop of Mbeya. 2013-02-12_1123Crossing into Zambia the train crawled along this stretch of track. It was more crowded now and the corridors of the train carriage bustled with activity. We were a bit numbed by our 40 plus hours of travel but we couldn’t help to think that Africa had just transformed itself as we crossed the border. Through the bars of the carriage window, children as young as five vied for empty plastic mineral water bottles. “You give bottle. I get Kwacha (the local currency). I eat.”

Two nights on the train gave much time to observe and reflect. My wife and I were going to a small village in northern Zambia to visit a rural education project sponsored by the UK-based NGO CamFed. I was on a planned leave of absence from my work as Executive Director of Contact Point, and was accompanying my wife as she provided photo-narrative support for this important local development project. As the train got closer to its destination, we both realized that what changed as we crossed the border was that the evidence of poverty was much more in-your-face: more noticeable impoverished people, more noticeable destitute children. We talked to our cabin mates, Zambians from two different parts of the country, about their economic and social realities. What did they do? What was their education? What about family and tribe? We were trying to understand, albeit at a very cursory level, social and economic mobility, access to health and education, and the role of tribe and religion in modern Zambian life. A few days later in Lusaka, I began to process what I have seen and heard. After chatting with our Zambian driver, Webster, about HIV/AIDS in his country, I wondered about the impact of the pandemic on the concept of career development here.

 

Context

Webster, in his mid twenties, was in good health. He had a high school education and a steady job working within the enterprise of our host family. His wife and two children lived with him in Lusaka, and his parents were alive and well. Most of all he was thankful for all of this. When asked what career aspirations he had for his two children, he looked over at us (we were sitting
in the front seat of his pick-up truck), and said: “the reality is that if you were both Zambian, one of us would not be here having this conversation. It is hard to plan a life when this reality is all around you.” It was a profound and deeply impactful statement. We were in a country with an HIV/AIDS rate of 20% – 30%.

It took a few more days for the full force of his statement to sink in. It had significant implications for education, health, the economy and the labour market in the country. I tried to balance the experiences of the train ride with what I saw in a modern Lusaka – car dealerships, strip malls, cyber-cafes, pubs and fast food joints. The concept of a career was a luxury here – in the realm of the few, while basic sustainability was the over arching concept for the many. The development challenges for African countries such as Zambia were profoundly far-reaching because of HIV/AIDS. Consider the following:1

  • At the end of 2001, 28.1 million adults and children were living with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa – 55% of HIV-positive adults were women
  • More than 13.7 million African children had lost one or both parents to AIDS by the end of 2001 and the number is expected to rise to 40 million over the next decade.
  • According to UNDP’s Human Development Report 2004, Zambia’s life expectancy at birth in 2002 was 32.7 years. Before AIDS, it was 68.6 years.
  • In the first ten months of 1998, Zambia lost 1,300 teachers to AIDS — the equivalent of around two thirds of all new teachers trained annually.

These figures are almost unimaginable. While HIV/AIDS has disproportionately affected economic sectors that have large numbers of mobile or migratory workers such as agriculture, transportation and mining, it has also affected educators at all levels and those in the private and public sectors.

A 2002 UN report citing a study by the International Labour Organization states that “it will become increasingly challenging to replace skilled workers across all occupational sectors in the continent because of the difficulty in training new workers, the loss of opportunities for on-the-job training due to the death of more experienced workers, and the increase in the number of children who must go to work, thus missing opportunities for skills training…it is hard to see how the stock of human capital can be maintained, given the erosion of capacity in the education sector presently underway. Also, the impact of AIDS on development and labour in the future will continue to be severe, because the education and training systems are failing to make provisions to replace the current and likely loss of skills in the workforce.2

 

A Sense of Hope

The project we visited a few days later, our main reason for coming to Zambia, was located just outside the town of Mpika, in the north of the country. The aim of the project was to augment existing CAMFed support in the area by building a girls’ hostel – they currently provided financial support for a rural school including supplies, 2013-02-12_1132curriculum development including AIDS awareness education, and administrative expenses. We visited a number of villages nearby with our local contacts (from the district education committee), liaising with villagers and trying to drum up interest in a meeting to discuss the hostel. The local communities had identified that fewer and fewer girls were attending the only school in the area. Financial reasons, distance and danger prohibited many girls from gaining an education. For some girls, the school was several kilometres from home – and they did not have adequate footwear. In some instances, girls would have to walk up to ten kilometres or more to get to school, and the potential for sexual assault (and possible infection) along the way was a real threat and deterrent. For other girls, their familial obligations to tend to household chores led to their increased absenteeism. The proposed hostel, built in close proximity to the school ground, would house these girls so that they were clothed, fed, and safely sheltered while they received their education.

The day of the meeting came, and the turnout was fantastic. A classroom at the school was designated for the meeting and it was filled to capacity with villagers from near and far who were curious and eager to talk about the need for a girls’ hostel. A dozen school girls entered the classroom and sang a song, “Thank you Mother CAMFed”, in praise of the support that had allowed them an education (I was later to learn that the song held a special meaning for some of those who were orphans and saw the development organization akin to a mother). The model proposed for the hostel project required some form of contribution from the girls’ families. The community of farmers and other villagers, in turn, offered what little money they could spare. One villager who had no money offered to make bricks while another two offered to build a part of the hostel with these bricks. A third offered a share of his crops to feed these workers. Many of these villagers had seen the impact of AIDS first hand – their families decimated and elders caring for AIDS orphans. One farmer had walked 25 km to meet with us when he had heard of the hostel. In his mind, this was emancipation for his daughter – she could be educated and have the chance of a better life than his, a well paying job, maybe in Lusaka or elsewhere.

With the possibility of an education, girls were talking about being nurses, teachers, or for one girl, working for the Tazara Railway as an engineer. In a country and a continent ravaged by HIV/AIDS there was hope that such localized initiatives were starting to make a difference. While the villagers never talked about AIDS, they knew something had to be done now so that the younger generation had a chance. They knew that women and girls were the face of AIDS in Africa – three-quarters of all Africans between the ages of 15 and 24 who are HIV-positive are women.3

As we left Zambia, I wondered if in ten years, the girl who aspired to be a railway engineer would indeed realize her goals. Would she beat the odds? Would she be alive in ten years?

My short time in Zambia left a profound impression on me. It increased my awareness of the real impact of the pandemic on human lives. Upon my return, I felt compelled to write about these experiences, to encourage others to educate themselves and be informed, and to challenge friends and colleagues to support initiatives that provide AIDS education and prevention in countries such as Zambia.

 

In contrast to other diseases, AIDS mostly devastates the productive age group — people between 15 and 50 years.
Source: www.fao.org/FOCUS/E/ aids/aids6-e.htm Some of the traditional mechanisms to ensure widows’ access to land contribute to the spread of AIDS — for example, levirate, the custom that obliges a man to marry his brother’s widow. Unfortunately, initiatives to stop these practices may leave widows without access to land and food.
Source: www.fao.org/FOCUS/E/aids/aids6-e.htm

 

For More Information:

UN AIDS – www.unaids.org

Food and Agriculture Organization – www.fao.org/FOCUS/E/aids/aids6-e.htm

International Labour Organization – www.ilo.ru/aids/docs/wp/wp1_labourmarket.pdf

CAMFed – www.camfed.org

Stephen Lewis Foundation –www.stephenlewisfoundation.org

 

 

References:

1www.ilo.ru/aids/docs/wp/wp1_labourmarket.pdf, http://hdr.undp.org/statistics/data/country_fact_sheets/cty_fs_ZMB.html, www.avert.org/aidsorphans.htm, www.fao.org/FOCUS/E/aids/aids6-e.htm

2www.un.org/Pubs/chronicle/2002/issue3/071602_impact_of_hiv.html

3www.un.org/ecosocdev/geninfo/afrec/vol18no3/183women_aids.htm

 

 

About the Author:

Riz Ibrahim was the founding Executive Director of Contact Point (1997 – 2003). In 2003 – 2004, he took a leave of absence, visiting development projects and rural communities in Southern Africa and South India. Riz is currently the Acting General Manager of CERIC – The Canadian Education and Research Institute for Counselling. He can be reached at: riz@ceric.ca.

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Snapshot

By Sandra Lim

Human Resources Professionals Association of Ontario – HRPAO

The Human Resources Professionals Association of Ontario is the professional association for human resource management in Ontario. With over 14,500 members in chapters across the province, HRPAO is moving forward strategically to meet the needs of the profession and business community for leading-edge human resources management.

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Publications + Products

How to Develop Essential Hr Policies and Procedures
John H. Mcconnell
Amacom, October 2004
ISBN: 0814408273

Your Identitiy Zones: Who Am I? Who Are Yu? How Do We Get Along?
Mark Williams 
Capital Books Inc, November 2004
ISBN: 1931868905

The Leadership Training Activity Book: 50 Exercises for Building Effective Leaders
Lois Hart
Amacom, November 2004
ISBN: 0814472621

Competency-Based Resumes: How to Bring Your Resume to the Top of the Pile
Linda Strasburg
Career Press, November 2004
ISBN: 156414772X

Pursuit of Passionate Purpose: Success Strategies for a Rewarding Business Life
Theresa M. Szczurek
Wiley, December 2004
ISBN: 0471703249

The New Workforce: Five Trends That Will Shape Your Company’s Future
Harriet Hankin
Amacom, December 2004
ISBN: 081440829X

Organizational Behaviour and Management
John Martin
Thomson Nelson, December 2004
ISBN: 1861529481

Executive Coaching: A Guide for the HR Professional
Anna Marie Valerio 
Philip A. Pfeiffer, December 2004
ISBN: 0787973017

Haldane’s Best Secrets of the Hidden Job Market: Smart Tips for Landing the Perfect Job
Bernard Haldane Associates 
Impact Publications, December 2004
ISBN: 1570232180

E-resumes: A Guide To Successful Online Job Hunting
Criscito Pat, CPRW
Barrons Ednl Series, January 2005
ISBN: 0764128965

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Hot Sites

Hiring and Retaining Good Employees
www.business-marketing.com/store/hiringgoodemp.html

Attracting and Retaining the Best Employees
www.strategyletter.com/cp_0700/cp_fa.asp

Creative Ideas for Retaining Employees
www.refresher.com/!rehideas.html

Steps to Developing a Personal Professional Development Plan
http://ecommerce.nsta.org/enewsletter/2002-09/pd_steps1.pdf

RCMP Employee’s Handbook – Developing Your Learning Strategy
www.rcmp-learning.org/docs/e-book.htm#appH

Personal Goal Setting
www.mindtools.com/page6.html

Planning for the Future: Setting Goals
http://careerplanning.about.com/od/settinggoals/a/goal_setting.htm

Goal Setting Tips
www.onlineconsulting.com/goals/goals_main.html

Relational Leadership
www.aasa.org/publications/cdarticledetail.cfm?ItemNumber=5533

Relational Leadership – Activities & Competencies
www.strategosinc.com/leadership_relational.htm

 

Looking for More Resources?

Check out These and Other Resources in the Contact Point Resource Library…

Books:

The HR Answer Book, 2004
By Shawn Smith, JD, and Rebecca Mazin

Building a High Morale Workplace, 2003
By Anne Bruce

Whale Done!: The Power of Positive Relationships, 2002
By Ken Blanchard, Thad Lacinak, Chuck Tompkins, Jim Ballard

Journal Articles:

Managing a Career Center with Minimal Staff, 2002
By Melanie Gold

Using Portfolios to Direct Workplace Learning, 2003
By John B. Stewart

Articles:

Career Development: An Organizational Tool for the Manager’s Tool Box, 2003
By Rob Shea

Getting to Value with Career Services, 2003
By Mark Venning

Conference Papers:

Value-able Portfolios: Wedding Individual and Organizational Career Development, 2000
By David Zinger

Oops, You’re Stepping on My Boundaries!, 2001
By Anne Marshall

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The Evolving Role of HR

By Lynn Lochbihler

Gone are the days where Human Resources (HR) was largely an administrative role responsible for assisting employees with personal problems and health benefits, organizing the annual staff Christmas party and on clean-up duty after a situation with an employee went awry. Enlightened organizations now respect and value Human Resources Management (HRM) for their key leadership role as long-term strategic business partners.

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New Programs and Initiatives

By Katherine Halpenny

WoodGreen Launches Homeward Bound Program

In 2002 alone, more than 2,700 single mothers and their children were forced to live in Toronto’s shelter system. Research clearly shows that families experiencing homelessness need a number of essential supports in order to maintain a stable home and achieve financial independence. The Homeward Bound program provides these supports through employment training, transitional housing, on-site child care, one-on-one counselling for the mothers and their children, and many other vital services, all under one roof. The program’s primary goal is to support 32 women and their children to move into independent housing and to have employment with family sustaining incomes within 3 years.

All of the women at Homeward Bound will receive basic computer training through the International Computer Driving Licence program to prepare them for employment in a variety of areas including office administration and information technology. Upon completion, each woman will be given the opportunity to attend one of Seneca College’s computer studies diploma programs. WoodGreen also provides other essential skills that Homeward Bound participants will need to become more self-sufficient. Through career preparation training, participants gain skills in communication, workplace culture and alternate dispute resolution. Through their life skills training the women learn more effective parenting skills, a better understanding of housing and tenancy issues, and how to create and manage a family budget.

On October 14th, 2004, WoodGreen Community Services and their private and public sector partners officially launched Homeward Bound, an innovative new program designed to help women and their children transition from shelter life to economic self-sufficiency. Many members of the community including the Counselling Foundation of Canada took part in the celebration, and witnessed the true spirit of the program through personal stories recounted by two of the women participants. In his remarks, The Counselling Foundation President & Chairman, Donald Lawson congratulated WoodGreen on creating a program that so effectively provided the foundation for career and life transformation that is at the core of the Foundation’s mission. Numerous community leaders were also in attendance to learn more about this ground-breaking model for supporting the development of families.

WoodGreen Community Services is a non-profit organization which supports 37,000 individuals and families each year to become more self-sufficient and to live independently in Toronto’s east end. The organization does this through a number of essential services, including affordable housing solutions, employment training, quality child care, after-school programs, help for new immigrants, supports for individuals with mental health or developmental challenges, and care for seniors, because everyone deserves the essentials of life.

For more information on WoodGreen Community Services, please visit www.woodgreen.org.

Katherine Halpenny is the Director of Marketing & Fund Development for WoodGreen Community Services. She can be reached through email at khalpenny@woodgreen.org.

 

Myers Briggs Type Indicator® and Strong® go On-line in Canada

It seems that there is a faster more efficient solution to everything these days. Often that means changing from paper to on-line delivery. This trend continues with Psychometrics Canada offering two of the worlds top assessment tools through their on-line test administration system, CareerID.com.

“Each customer will have their own website that has their organization’s look and feel. This is where their client can log in and complete the MBTI,” says Psychometrics’ Director of Business Development, Mark Fitzsimmons. “Counsellors can then generate the specific report they need. It is instant feedback that they can print off or email back to the test taker.”

Counsellors and HR professionals wanted to be able to generate reports instantly and even have clients’ complete assessments from home. The on-line system was developed two years ago to enable the company to offer on-line access to their own assessments. Quickly they saw that the application could be expanded to host other publisher’s materials as well.

“We have been picking up assessments from around the world, and will be launching them soon as well. The MBTI and Strong are what customers have been asking for so they have been our top priority. French language MBTI products will be available in 2005, we’re still working on translations and field testing,” says Fitzsimmons.

Scheduled to be available by the end of October, Psychometrics has already begun taking advanced orders for websites. “It is really an exciting time. We have been working towards a Canadian solution to get the MBTI and Strong on-line for our customers for many years. Finally, we can say its available!”

Psychometrics Canada Ltd. is one example of a Canadian firm providing systems for counsellors to administer assessment tools on-line. High demand tests available in French and English include the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®, Strong Interest Inventory®, Work Personality Index, Career Values Scale, and the Career Interest Profiler. More information is available at www.CareerID.com.

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Upcoming Events

Upcoming Canadian Events

Work Wise 2004: Changes and Challenges in the Workplace Career Development Conference , Career Development Association of Alberta (CDAA) Southern Alberta Chapter, Lethbridge, AB. November 5, 2004

16th Annual OAAPT Conference, Ontario Association for the Application of Personality Type – OAAPT, Mississauga, ON. November 6 – 7, 2004

OSCA 2004: Polishing the Many Facets of Guidance, Ontario School Counsellors’ Association – OSCA, Toronto, ON. November 7 – 9, 2004

CES 25th Annual Conference: Career Development: Showcasing Excellence in Practice, Career Education Society of BC – CES, Vancouver, BC. November 18 – 19, 2004

6th Annual Opportunities Conference, Ontario Network of Employment Skills Training Projects – ONESTEP and Ontario Alliance of Career Development Practitioners – OACDP, Hamilton, ON. November 22 – 24, 2004

SHE WORKS – Women in Trades and Technology Conference 2004, Women Building Futures Society, Edmonton, AB. November 26 – 27, 2004

NBCDAG Annual Career Development Forum – “Making Connections”, New Brunswick Career Development Action Group – NBCDAG, Fredericton, NB. November 30 – December 1, 2004

 

Upcoming International Events

E-Learn 2004 — World Conference on E-Learning in Corporate, Government, Healthcare, & Higher Education, Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education, Washington, DC. US. November 1 – 5, 2004

Assessment 2004, Association for Assessment in Counseling and Education – AACE, Charleston, NC. US. November 11 – 12, 2004

2004 ACTE Convention and Career Tech Expo, Association for Career & Technical Education, Las Vegas, Nevada US. December 9 – 11, 2004

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Snapshot

International Personnel Management Association – Canada

IPMA-Canada … national presence, national voice, international connections. IPMA-Canada is a national human resources association with eight Chapters and members in all provinces. We are globally connected through our affiliation with other IPMA associations throughout the world. Our mission is to promote excellence in the practice of human resource management. We aim to provide a wealth of professionally recognized programs and services that are designed to meet the certification standards, professional development expectations and communication needs of Human Resource (HR) practitioners across Canada.

Visit us at www.ipma-aigp.ca
E-mail: National@ipma-aigp.ca
Toll Free: 1-866-433-0234 or call 780-433-0234.

 

 

Qu’est-ce que l’AIGP – Canada

L’AIGP-Canada … une présence nationale, une voie nationale, des relations internationales. L’AIGP-Canada est une association nationale de professionnels et professionnelles en ressources humaines qui compte huit chapitres et des membres dans toutes les provinces. Nous avons créé des liens à l’échelle internationale par notre affiliation à d’autres associations de gestion du personnel du monde entier. Notre mission est de promouvoir l’excellence dans la pratique de la gestion des ressources humaines. Nous visons à offrir une variété de programmes et de services reconnus professionnellement qui sont conçus pour répondre aux normes d’agrément, aux attentes sur le plan du perfectionnement professionnel et aux besoins en communication des praticiens et praticiennes en ressources humaines du Canada.

Visitez notre site Web à l’adresse : www.ipma-aigp.ca, ou communiquez avec nous par courriel, à l’adresse : National@ipma-aigp.ca, ou par téléphone, au numéro : 780-433-0234 ou, sans frais, au 1-866-433-0234 (anglais); 1-866-433-0620 (français).

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Book Club

Starting Point for Mentoring
Christine Cuerrier
Les Éditions de la Fondation de l’entrepreneurship, 2003
ISBN: 2-89521-055-1

Christine Cuerriers’ Staring Point is the first guide in 6-part series on mentoring. This introductory guide to mentoring offers a basic tool for learning about the concept of mentoring and more critically it provides the means to distinguish mentoring from other forms of learning, such as coaching and tutoring.

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