Publications + Products

Access for Foreign-Trained IT Professionals: An Exploration of Systemic Barriers to Employment
JobStart and Skills for Change (March 2001). 40 pages.
Downloaded free of charge at www.skillsforchange.org

Counselor’s Guide to Career Assessment Instruments, 4th Edition, 2001
Ed. Jerome T. Kapes and Edwin A. Whitfield, National Career Development Association
Ordering information at www.ncda.org

Getting Started: A Survival Kit for True Colors(TM) Facilitators
Roberta Neault, Career LifeSkills Resources
order via: www.career-lifeskills.com

Under Construction: Pathways to Work
Toronto Centre for Career Action, the Ontario Ministry of Education and Training
preface by Dr. R. Vance Peavy
order via: www.career-lifeskills.com

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Hot Sites

It’s A Way of Thinking: New Definitions of Entrepreneurship
www.realm.net/wayofthinking/

The Edge
www.theedgemag.org

What Can I Do With A Major In…?
www.uncwil.edu/stuaff/career/Majors

 

More Apprenticeship Sites

General:

Red Seal
www.red-seal.ca

Skills Canada
www.skillswork.com

Work Destinations
www.workdestinations.org

 

Targeted information:

The Aboriginal Human Resource Development Council of Canada
www.ahrdcc.com

WITT National Network

The Minority Apprentice Project, Quebec

 

Occupational Profiles:

Learn And Earn

Trade Secrets
www.tradesecrets.org/

Opportunity Knocks

 

Sector information:

Careers In Oil And Gas
http://careersinoilandgas.com

Trades In Construction
www.madewiththetrades.com

Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television’s National Apprenticeship Training Program (NATP)
www.academy.ca/dev/natp.htm

 

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Apprenticeship Toolkit: Connecting Students to Opportunities in Skilled Trades

Toronto District School Board, 2000, three ring binder format
ISBN 1-55000-570-7

The Apprenticeship Toolkit is a resource for teachers, counsellors and students wishing to learn about apprenticeship in Ontario. Much of the information could also be used by residents of other provinces, as the majority of the trades featured are eligible for the Inter-provincial Red Seal program.

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Book Club

The Future of Success

By Robert B. Reich
Alfred A. Knopf, 2000, ISBN: 1-896324-34-7

Ten years ago, former US Secretary of Labour Robert Reich wrote The Work of Nations, one of the first books to take the concept of the new economy into the public eye. As he advocates that innovation and re-examination are critical in today’s workplace, he has given us more food for thought as he analyses the effect of globalized markets, technological advances, e-commerce and the unrelenting demand to produce better and faster.

For a politician (and economist), Reich is surprisingly accessible, outlining the history and development of the new economy through the last two centuries, and lacing the chapters with anecdotes from all social strata and age groups. He also points out misconceptions such as the popular belief that today’s innovators must be adept at using new information technology. Reich feels that the true value is in the creative process, which in itself is not technology dependant, although it may require technology for delivery or implementation. He defines creative workers as either “Geeks,” or “Shrinks.” The Geeks are the creative introverts, being absorbed by what can be done with a product or a concept. They play and create, idea people who expand the possibilities of a project or company. The Shrink is the people person (including counsellors), who know what people really want for the product or service. They are the heart of the product or service.

The core of Reich’s thesis is that technology is speeding and broadening access to “terrific deals.” This spurs worker mobility, free agent commerce, and the need for workers to constantly sell themselves or create their “brand”. It also contributes greatly to the decline of loyalty and the increased value on “stickiness” or qualities that entice one to return to or remain with a product, service or organization. It is great for the consumer, but continuous stress for the seller, with the steep price of “more frenzied lives, less security, more economic and social stratification, the loss of time and energy for family, friendship, community and self.”

There are three sections to the book, and three “discussions”. Part I, “The New Work” will have the most relevance for counsellors. Part II, “The New Life” delves into changes in gender roles and workload sharing, stability and dynamics of the family (although narrowly defined) and the “commercialization of community”. Personal attention is becoming a commodity, one with an increasing demand, although remuneration does not yet reflect that. Part III, “Choices” summarizes the choices for both individuals and society. Reich takes care to say that our choices are not simple, and that people need not feel additional pressure and guilt if not able to achieve “balance” easily as this really is a systemic problem. The global and societal choices we face are interesting, but few of the potential solutions put forth (such as “community insurance” to ensure that communities are economically healthy even if major industries close) are likely to see implementation.

 

Volunteers Wanted!

Join our Resources Review Committee. Representatives from all sectors sought to give opinions on the current resource listings and to recommend additional resources. Decisions are made through an e-mail discussion list, so there are no meetings to attend. The revisions are expected to be completed by late fall of 2001. Interested? Write to admin@contactpoint.ca.

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The Interprovincial Standards “Red Seal” Program

By Julie Perrault

The Apprenticeship System in Canada

Apprenticeship is a structured system whereby an apprentice acquires the knowledge and skills, and learns to use the tools and materials of a trade while employed in that trade under the supervision of a skilled journeyperson. It includes on-the-job training and formal in-school technical training usually taken at a college or a private training institute.

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Career-LifeSkills Resources Inc.

Make the Right Choice…

Did you know that our 5-day MBTI qualifying program is the most content rich, experientially based workshop in North America? You will leave this course well prepared to immediately put type theory into practice with:

  • multiple outlines for conducting introductory workshops
  • reproducible masters for handouts and overheads
  • more than 50 exercises to use when working with type theory

Can’t come to us for training? We would be delighted to come to you for an in-house program for groups of 10 or more. Browse our site or call for details on our high quality training prgrams, including: You and the Career Development Process, True Colors, FIRO-B, Strong Interest Inventory, and the COPSystem.

 

116 Viceroy Road, Unit B1 – Concord, Ontario, L4K2M2

Tel. (905)760-0111 or toll-free in Canada 1-877-680-0200 Fax. (905)760-0113

www.career-lifeskills.com

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Publications + Products

SRDC Produces Report on Study of Employment Programs for Disadvantaged Youth

Disadvantaged Canadian youth often encounter difficulties in becoming established in the labour force. Whether due to emotional and physical abuse, drug and alcohol addiction, failure in school, or involvement in the criminal justice system, it is clear that many of these young people have inadequate skills and experience to compete in labour markets that increasingly require advanced training.

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Snapshot

ASPECT

Association of Service Providers for Employability and Career Training BC’s Community Based Trainers

ASPECT is . . . a provincial association made up of over 140 members who provide employability and career training to people with barriers to employment; some members are private trainers and some are non-profit agencies.

ASPECT membership . . . is available to organizations in BC that provide community based employment and career training. ASPECT members deliver a variety of programs and services designed to assist individuals to overcome their employment disadvantages.

ASPECT exists to . . facilitate resource sharing and problem solving between agencies, promote good working relationships between agencies and government and to coordinate professional development opportunities for the management and staff of member agencies.

ASPECT administers . . .Job Start, a wage subsidy program for young people aged 17 to 24 and Training Works! A workplace based training program. ASPECT subcontracts the delivery of these programs to its qualified member agencies.

ASPECT members receive:

  • Coordination and assistance with advocacy activities
  • Requests for proposals to administer ASPECT programs
  • A provincial directory of all member agencies
  • Quarterly newsletter ASPECTIVES
  • Information about regional professional development activities, and
  • Invitations to participate in conferences and the Association’s Annual General Meeting.

ASPECT advocates . . . on behalf of its member agencies and their clients, both federally and provincally. On the national front, ASPECT represents its members with the following committees and organizations:

  • The Canadian Coalition of Community Based Trainers (CCCBT)
  • The Canadian Association of Education and Training Organizations (CAETO)
  • The Canada Career Consortium (CCC)
  • The National Headquarters of Human Resources Development Canada (HRDC), and
  • The National Reference Committee for the First Source web site

ASPECT Board of Directors . . . consists of executive members as well as regional representatives from the Fraser Valley, Thompson-Oakanagan, Kootenays, Vancouver and Vancouver Island. The Board meets frequently to exchange information through networking, events and conference calls. ASPECT maintains a provincial office, located in Victoria.

 

Denise Dawson is a Certified Human Resources Professional (CHRP) with a background in the management of a large non profit community based training agency. As Director of Membership Services with ASPECT, her role is to provide members with information, research, advocacy and professional development opportunities.

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