Schools

Clark's $10M Grant Will Retrain Up 800 Local Workers

The federal grant, the only one of its kind in the Northeast, will allow Clark to offer training in IT fields.

Press release from Clark University:

Jan. 22, 2021

Clark University has received a $10 million award from the Department of Labor, Employment, and Training Administration’s H-1B One Workforce Grant Program to help train the workforce of the future for jobs in critical industries such as information technology, advanced manufacturing, and transportation. Clark is the only educational institution in the Northeast that received one these grants.

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Clark University’s School of Professional Studies will administer the grant, and will establish the TechBoost Program, a collaborative partnership that will involve three other education providers, four workforce development boards, and six employers, who will provide IT and IT-related industry sector-based credential and work-based training to participants. *a list of these partners appears below

The TechBoost Program will enable 800 primarily unemployed and underemployed workers—especially workers displaced due to Covid-19—to be trained and retrained in IT and IT-related industry career pathways. Participants will receive employability and soft skills training, and will also be placed into appropriate work-based learning opportunities including on-the job training, paid internships, and apprenticeship programs.

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“COVID-19 has made it abundantly clear the important role technology plays in our ability to stay connected with community, and to remain effecive and empowered in a rapidly evolving economy,” said Clark President David Fithian. “I’m proud Clark has this opportunity to help train our future IT professionals, especially those whose livelihoods have been impacted by the pandemic.”

Clark will use innovative training strategies and training delivery methods to provide individuals with the skills necessary to succeed in middle- and high-skilled H-1B occupations, including information security analyst, computer systems analyst, data analyst/scientist, GIS technician, operations research analyst, software developer, and computer support specialist. Instruction models will combine on-the-job and other earn and learn training with socially distanced classroom or virtual training. New and existing LMS platforms will be utilized. TechBoost will also identify and explore the effectiveness of mobile learning, blended learning, video training, and simulation-based learning.

“The U.S. Department of Labor is challenging communities to think as ‘One Workforce’,” said Assistant Secretary of Labor for Employment and Training John Pallasch. “In a post-coronavirus world, it is critical that local organizations think as one instead of independent parts of a process. Our goal is to create seamless community partnerships to build career pathways for local job seekers to enter middle- to high-skilled occupations in cyber security, advanced manufacturing and transportation.”

“We are very pleased to be receiving this grant award,” said John LaBrie, dean and associate provost for professional education at Clark. “It adds considerable momentum to Clark University’s efforts to ensure learning pathways that lead to employability.”

This is the second eight-figure federal grant Clark has secured in the last 18 months. In August of 2019, Clark received a $12 million apprenticeship grant from the Department of Labor, Employment, and Training Administration to provide business technology training nationwide to people struggling with unemployment and underemployment. Through the Tech Quest Apprenticeship, Clark works with the Public Consulting Group (PCG) and a national consortium of workforce development boards and higher education institutions to provide 4,000 pre-apprenticeships and 1,000 IT and IT-related apprenticeships to unemployed, underemployed, and incumbent workers through 2023.

The U.S. Department of Labor awarded a total of $145 million in the H-1B One Workforce Grant Program to invest in training for key sectors of the U.S. economy. Details about the 19 awards can be found here.

Founded in 1887, Clark University is a liberal arts-based research university that prepares its students to meet tomorrow’s most daunting challenges and embrace its greatest opportunities. Through 33 undergraduate majors, more than 30 advanced degree programs, and nationally recognized community partnerships, Clark fuses rigorous scholarship with authentic world and workplace experiences that empower our learning community to pursue lives and careers of meaning and consequence. Clark’s academic departments and institutes develop solutions to complex global problems across the disciplines, and the University addresses the behavioral health of adolescents and young adults through the Mosakowski Institute for Public Enterprise.

Partners:

  • Education Providers: Florida Career College, Holyoke Community College and Quinsigamond Community College
  • Workforce Development Boards: CareerSource Tampa Bay, MassHire Boston, MassHire Central and Partner4Work
  • Employers: City of Worcester, IQ4, Lucravalde, Ownforce, Public Consulting Group, Inc. and the Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce

This press release was produced by Clark University. The views expressed here are the author's own.

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