NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Kadkhoda, Anahita – 2002
Too often career counselors hear of, or work with, unemployed or underemployed foreign trained immigrant professionals. With the globalization of economy and shortages in skilled labor in Canada, the number of immigrant professionals is on the rise. It is becoming clear that services and programs are necessary to assist such individuals to ensure…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Counseling Techniques, Employment Services, Immigrants
Webster, Suzanne – 1995
A project adapted an existing problem-solving curriculum to help unemployed or underemployed displaced homemakers and single parents qualify for job placement and training. Forty-five adult learners from the New Choice program participated. Handouts adapted from a prior Math Employment project and instructor-created materials were used. Handouts…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Curriculum Development, Displaced Homemakers, One Parent Family
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Shipunov, V. G. – Russian Education and Society, 1993
Asserts that the Russian educational system is facing a crisis of confidence among its teachers and students regarding employment opportunities after leaving secondary education. Calls for educational reform in curriculum and instructional methods that can provide periodic retraining as economic changes occur. (CFR)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Free Enterprise System
Somerset Community Coll, KY. – 1987
During the 1986-87 program year, the Transitional Support Services Program, a cooperatively funded project between the Job Training Partnership Act and the Carl D. Perkins Vocational Education Act, continued its services as a career development program for single parents/homemakers in Kentucky who are unemployed or underemployed. The program…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Career Development, Displaced Homemakers, Divorce
Atlanta Univ., GA. Women's Inst. for the Southeast. – 1983
This booklet is a description of a model program developed to improve the status of transitional black women in the southeastern United States. These women are defined as under- or unemployed, poor, undereducated, migrant, or household heads, unaware of specialized educational and occupational opportunities available to them, and/or unable to take…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Blacks, Career Education, Children