Descriptor
Source
Training | 4 |
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 4 |
Opinion Papers | 4 |
Reports - Descriptive | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Location
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Lee, Chris; Zemke, Ron – Training, 1983
The real retraining of the American work force will not come about through massive, federally operated job training programs. It will come about only when employers are able to look forward to a promising economic future that requires highly trained and motivated employees and that offers real jobs. (Author/SSH)
Descriptors: Economic Development, Job Development, Labor Force Development, Reentry Workers
Gordon, Jack – Training, 1991
Redesigning jobs, training, and retraining may be the most important economic challenge facing this country for the next decade. Training must support jobs that are really changing and retraining has to prepare people for jobs that really exist. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Futures (of Society), Job Development, Labor Force Development
Ross, Paul C. – Training, 1979
Describes a curriculum management approach to training that ties together employee career development, current performance needs, and future business plans in order to provide a coherent planning system for the conduct of industrial training. (LRA)
Descriptors: Career Development, Career Ladders, Curriculum Development, Educational Needs
Geber, Beverly – Training, 1993
There are inherent problems when unskilled or semiskilled workers are retrained for high skilled jobs that do not and will not exist. Although the consensus is that smarter workers will make the nation more competitive in the world market, the occupation that will add the most jobs by the year 2005 is retail clerk. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Government Role, Labor Force Development, Labor Needs