[NIFL-FAMILY:1701] From Tom Sticht

From: Noemi Aguilar (naguilar@famlit.org)
Date: Fri Oct 24 2003 - 11:43:25 EDT


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Subject: [NIFL-FAMILY:1701] From Tom Sticht
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  October 23, 2003

  Functional Context Education (FCE) Part 1: New Interest in FCE Theory and
  Principles for Integrating Basic Skills and Work Skills

  Tom Sticht
  International Consultant in Adult Education

  Functional Context Education principles were first formulated in a 1987
  book colleagues and I wrote entitled Cast-off youth: Policy and Training
  Methods from the Military Experience (Sticht et al, NY: Praeger). After
  examining fifty years of research in the military on how the services had
  been able to take young adults without any real work experience, many of
  whom were almost functionally illiterate, and rapidly train them to become
  competent workers in a wide variety of jobs, several principles for
  program design were formulated. These principles became the foundation for
  the federal government’s 1988 National Workplace Literacy Program, which
  is now defunct. In 1992 I gave presentations on FCE for workplace literacy
  in the United Kingdom.

  Following is an extract from a recent article at the online newspaper in
  the United Kingdom called the Independent at
  http://education.independent.co.uk/further/story.jsp?story=449220

  This article reveals a renewed call in the United Kingdom for Functional
  Context Education in which basic skills (literacy) instruction is
  integrated (embedded) within vocational job training.

  In the United States, the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 proposed
  amendments for 2003 presently being considered by the U. S. Senate (S.
  1627) calls under Title 1 for workplace programs that integrate basic
  language and vocational training and under Title 2 for workplace literacy
  programs. Free copies of a Functional Context Education report with
  illustrations of integrated basic skills and job and parenting skills
  programs can be found under Full Text Documents online at www.nald.ca
  searched by S for my last name.

  Begin Abridged Quote From Independent:

  " A shameful secret

  Poor literacy and poor numeracy cause accidents and huge loss of revenue
  in the UK construction industry, reports Robert Nurden

  02 October 2003

  When Jordan Atanassov arrived in England from Bulgaria five years, ago he
  spoke no English. He took a job as a construction labourer but, while
  working at London's Canary Wharf, he made use of an on-site
  adult-education course in literacy. He is now training to be a scaffolder.
  "I have taken a step up in the world - literally," he says. "I have a
  dangerous job, and I have to be able to read health-and-safety manuals - I
  couldn't before. It's also helped me to understand life in Britain and get
  on better with colleagues." Not every construction worker is as lucky as
  Jordan.

  Few bosses are prepared to give adult education the time of day. And it's
  UK workers in their thirties and forties who are least likely to come
  clean about their poor literacy skills. Yet increasingly, it is being
  acknowledged that a hefty proportion of the defects and accidents within
  the sector - a bill that amounts to £1bn a year – are caused by poor
  reading, writing and maths. Not being able to add up or read signs,
  misinterpretation of architects' instructions, wrong orders, filling out
  time-sheets incorrectly and poor communication are all evidence of on-site
  incompetence.

   Now research by the Workplace Basic Skills Network of Lancaster
  University, on behalf of the Black Country Learning and Skills Council,
  has unearthed further evidence of the deplorable state of the sector's
  basic skills levels. Findings suggest that construction workers' reading
  abilities can be so poor that they often have difficulty finding the site
  they are supposed to be working on. "One of the most alarming things to
  come to light," says Joy Evans, who is heading the research in the Black
  Country, "is that the macho culture prevalent in building means that men
  are afraid they will lose face if they admit that they have poor literacy
  and numeracy skills."…

  …But two important initiatives are underway. The construction industry is
  moving towards a fully trained, qualified workforce, and the Government is
  pouring £1.6bn over the next three years into improving the basic-skills
  level of Britain's workforce. The Construction Industry Training Board has
  introduced a system that requires operatives to hold a card of competence,
  guaranteeing that they satisfy minimum professional standards. The route
  to that card – introduced after pressure by the Government and the Union
  of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians to cut the number of
  accidents - is via a course called OSAT (On-Site Assessment and Training).

  But there's a catch. The health-and-safety part of the test has to be
  taken on a PC, and uses polysyllabic words. This, according to Mr Sloane,
  is going to cause "massive problems". "Not only do many of these guys
  struggle with reading, they have no experience of using a computer. The
  whole initiative could be a disaster," he says.

  Ms Evans is in no doubt as to what needs to be done. "Among many employers
  and teachers, the favoured solution is to assess literacy and numeracy
  skills at the beginning of a construction course, and to embed those basic
  skills into the vocational content at an early stage," she says."End Quote
  >From Independent.

  My experience in examining numerous workplace literacy programs in
  different countries is that not only can such programs produce learning
  outcomes of benefit for both employers and employees on the job, they
  frequently also produce spin-off benefits such as increased reading to
  children, more effective communication in the schools and other
  establishments in the community, and better interactions with health
  providers, producing what I call "double duty dollars." (DDD). That is,
  the dollars invested in integrated adult basic skills and job skills
  programs return multiple dollars worth of value in areas beyond the mere
  improvement of skills and job peformance.

  It is interesting to see a renewed interest in Functional Context
  Education in vocational areas in the UK. Perhaps this will lead to
  "poly-productive pounds! (PPP)"


  Thomas G. Sticht
  International Consultant in Adult Education
  2062 Valley View Blvd.
  El Cajon, CA 92019-2059
  Tel/fax: (619) 444-9133
  Email: tsticht@aznet.net


Noemi Aguilar
National Center for Family Literacy
325 West Main Street, Suite 300
Louisville, KY 40202-4237

Phone: 502/584-1133 ext 168
Fax: 502/584-0172
E-mail: naguilar@famlit.org



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