|
| Home | IEP | Special
Education | Transition | STC
| MI | CREDE | Service
Learning |
Secretary's Commission on Achieving
Necessary Skills (SCANS)
The following information is adopted from the web site http://www.academicinnovations.com/report.html
(retrieved on 3/29/01) and reorganized
in the following format.
Report Title: What
Work Requires of Schools on initial SCANS report.
This 61 page report defines the five competencies and three-part
foundation that constitute the SCANS skills. Ordering information
is listed at the bottom page.
|
Three-Part Foundation | Five
Workplace Competencies |
| Glossary of Terms | Additional
Pages | Order Information |
|
The SCANS Skills
and Competencies: an Overview
The Secretary's Commission on Achieving
Necessary Skills (SCANS) was appointed by the Secretary of Labor to
determine the skills our young people need to succeed in the world of
work. The Commission's fundamental purpose is to encourage a
high-performance economy characterized by high-skill, high-wage
employment.
The primary objective is to help teachers understand
how curriculum and instruction must change to enable students to develop
those high performance skills needed to succeed in the high performance
workplace.
SCANS has focused on one important aspect of
schooling: what they called "learning a living" system. In 1991,
they issued their initial report, What
Work Requires of Schools. As outlined in that report, a
high-performance workplace requires workers who have a solid
foundation in the basic literacy and computational skills, in the
thinking skills necessary to put knowledge to work, and in the personal
qualities that make workers dedicated and trustworthy.
High-performance workplaces
also require other competencies: the ability to manage resources,
to work amicably and productively with others, to acquire and use
information, to master complex systems, and to work with a variety of
technologies.
This document outlines both these "fundamental
skills" and "workplace competencies"
| Top
|
|
A Three-Part Foundation
Basic Skills:
Reads, writes, performs arithmetic and mathematical
operations, listens and speaks
�
A. Reading--locates,
understands, and interprets written information in prose and in documents
such as manuals, graphs, and schedules
�
B. Writing--communicates
thoughts, ideas, information, and messages in writing; and creates
documents such as letters, directions, manuals, reports, graphs, and flow
charts
�
C. Arithmetic/Mathematics--performs
basic computations and approaches practical problems by choosing
appropriately from a variety of mathematical techniques
�
D. Listening--receives,
attends to, interprets, and responds to verbal messages and other cues
�
E. Speaking--organizes
ideas and communicates orally
Thinking Skills:
Thinks creatively, makes decisions, solves problems,
visualizes, knows how to learn, and reasons
�
A. Creative Thinking--generates new ideas
�
B. Decision Making--specifies goals and constraints, generates alternatives,
considers risks, and evaluates and chooses best alternative
�
C. Problem Solving--recognizes problems and devises and implements plan of
action
�
D. Seeing
Things in the Mind's Eye--organizes, and processes symbols,
pictures, graphs, objects, and other information
�
E. Knowing
How to Learn--uses efficient learning techniques to acquire and
apply new knowledge and skills
�
F. Reasoning--discovers
a rule or principle underlying the relationship between two or objects and
applies it when solving a problem
Personal Qualities:
Displays responsibility, self-esteem, sociability,
self-management, and integrity and honesty
�
A. Responsibility--exerts
a high level of effort and perseveres towards goal attainment
�
B. Self-Esteem--believes
in own self-worth and maintains a positive view of self
�
C. Sociability-demonstrates
understanding, friendliness, adaptability, empathy, and
�
D. Self-Management--assesses
self accurately, sets personal goals, monitors progress, and exhibits
self-control
�
E. Integrity/Honesty--chooses
ethical courses of action
| Top
|
|
Five Workplace Competencies
Resources:
Identifies, organizes, plans, and allocates resources
�
A. Time--Selects
goal-relevant activities, ranks them, allocates time, and prepares and
follows schedules
�
B. Money--Uses or
prepares budgets, makes forecasts, keeps records, and makes adjustments to
meet objectives
�
C. Material and
Facilities--Acquires, stores, allocates, and uses materials or space
efficiently
�
D. Human Resources--Assesses
skills and distributes work accordingly, evaluates performance and
provides feedback
Interpersonal:
Works with others
�
A. Participates as
Member of a Team--contributes to group effort
�
B. Teaches Others New
Skills
�
C. Serves
Clients/Customers--works to satisfy customers' expectations
�
D. Exercises
Leadership--communicates ideas to justify position, persuades and
convinces others, responsibly challenges existing procedures and policies
�
E. Negotiates--works
toward agreements involving exchange of resources, resolves divergent
interests
�
F. Works with
Diversity--works well with men and women from diverse backgrounds
Information:
Acquires and uses information
�
A. Acquires and
Evaluates Information
�
B. Organizes and
Maintains Information
�
C. Interprets and
Communicates Information
�
D. Uses Computers to
Process Information
Systems:
Understands complex inter-relationships
�
A. Understands Systems--knows
how social, organizational, and technological systems work and operates
effectively with them
�
B. Monitors and
Corrects Performance--distinguishes trends, predicts impacts on
systems operations, diagnoses deviations in systems' performance and
corrects malfunctions
�
C. Improves or Designs
Systems--suggests modifications to existing systems and develops new
or alternative systems to improve performance
Technology:
Works with a variety of technologies
�
A. Selects Technology--chooses
procedures, tools or equipment including computers and related
technologies
�
B. Applies Technology
to Task--Understands overall intent and proper procedures for setup
and operation of equipment
�
C. Maintains and
Troubleshoots Equipment--Prevents, identifies, or solves problems with
equipment, including computers and other technologies
| Top
|
|
Glossary of Terms
Basic Skills
Reading:
Locates, understands, and interprets written
information in prose and documents--including manuals, graphs, and
schedules--to perform tasks; learns from text by determining the main idea
or essential message; identifies relevant details, facts, and
specifications; infers or locates the meaning of unknown or technical
vocabulary; and judges the accuracy, appropriateness, style, and
plausibility of reports, proposals, or theories of other writers.
Writing:
Communicates thoughts, ideas, information, and
messages in writing; records information completely and accurately;
composes and creates documents such as letters, directions, manuals,
reports, proposals, graphs, flow charts; uses language, style,
organization, and format appropriate to the subject matter, purpose, and
audience. Includes supporting documentation and attends to level of
detail; checks, edits, and revises for correct information, appropriate
emphasis, form, grammar, spelling, and punctuation.
Arithmetic/Mathematics:
Arithmetic --Performs basic computations; uses basic
numerical concepts such as whole numbers and percentages in practical
situations; makes reasonable estimates of arithmetic results without a
calculator; and uses tables, graphs, diagrams, and charts to obtain or
convey quantitative information.
Mathematics--Approaches practical problems by
choosing appropriately from a variety of mathematical techniques; uses
quantitative data to construct logical explanations for real world
situations; expresses mathematical ideas and concepts orally and in
writing; and understands the role of chance in the occurrence and
prediction of events.
Listening:
Receives, attends to, interprets, and responds to
verbal messages and other cues such as body language in ways that are
appropriate to the purpose; for example, to comprehend; to learn; to
critically evaluate; to appreciate; or to support the speaker.
Speaking:
Organizes ideas and communicates oral messages
appropriate to listeners and situations; participates in conversation,
discussion, and group presentations; selects an appropriate medium for
conveying a message; uses verbal languages and other cues such as body
language appropriate in style, tone, and level of complexity to the
audience and the occasion; speaks clearly and communicates message;
understands and responds to listener feed back; and asks questions when
needed.
| Top
|
Thinking Skills
Creative Thinking:
Uses imagination freely, combines ideas or
information in new ways, makes connections between seemingly unrelated
ideas, and reshapes goals in ways that reveal new possibilities.
Decision Making:
Specifies goals and constraints, generates
alternatives, considers risks, and evaluates and chooses best
alternatives.
Problem Solving
Recognizes that a problem exists (i.e., there is a
discrepancy between what is and what should or could be), identifies
possible reasons for the discrepancy, and devises and implements a plan of
action to resolve it. Evaluates and monitors progress, and revises plan as
indicated by findings.
Seeing Things in the Mind's Eye:
Organizes and processes symbols, pictures, graphs,
objects or other information; for example, see a building from blue print,
a system's operation from schematics, the flow of work activities from
narrative descriptions, or the taste of food from reading a recipe.
Knowing How to Learn:
Recognizes and can use learning techniques to apply
and adapt new knowledge and skills in both familiar and changing
situations. Involves being aware of learning tools such as personal
learning styles (visual, aural, etc.), formal learning strategies (note
taking or clustering items that share some characteristics), and informal
learning strategies (awareness of unidentified false assumptions that may
lead to faulty conclusions).
Reasoning
Discovers a rule or principle underlying the
relationship between two or more objects and applies it in solving a
problem. For example, uses logic to draw conclusions from available
information, extracts rules or principles from a set of objects or written
text; applies rules and principles to a new situation, or determines which
conclusions are correct when given a set of facts and a set of
conclusions.
| Top
|
Personal Qualities
Responsibility:
Exerts a high level of effort and perseverance
towards goal attainment. Works hard to become excellent at doing tasks by
setting high standards, paying attention to details, working well, and
displaying a high level concentration even when assigned an unpleasant
task. Displays high standards of attendance, punctuality, enthusiasm,
vitality, and optimism in approaching and completing tasks.
Self-Esteem:
Believes in own self-worth and maintains a positive
view of self; demonstrates knowledge of own skills and abilities; is aware
of impact on others; and knows own emotional capacity and needs and how to
address them.
Sociability
Demonstrates understanding, friendliness,
adaptability, empathy, and politeness in new and on-going group settings.
Asserts self in familiar and unfamiliar social situations; relates well to
others; responds appropriately as the situation requires; and takes an
interest in what others say and do.
Self-Management:
Assesses own knowledge, skills, and abilities
accurately; sets well-defined and realistic personal goals; monitors
progress toward goal attainment and motivates self through goal
achievement; exhibits self-control and responds to feedback unemotionally
and nondefensively; is a "self-starter."
Integrity/Honesty.
Can be trusted. Recognizes when faced with making a
decision or exhibiting behavior that may break with commonly-held personal
or societal values; understands the impact of violating these beliefs and
codes on an organizations, self, and others; and chooses an ethical course
of action.
Taken from: What Work
Requires of Schools: A SCANS Report for America 2000. The Secretary's
Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills, a publication of the US
Department of Labor, June 1991.
| Top
|
|
Additional pages on skills: (SCANS)
http://www.dol.gov/dol/_sec/public/skills_summit/main.htm
http://64.57.102.78/index.html
|
What
Work Requires of Schools is the title of the initial SCANS report.
This 61 page report defines the five competencies and three-part
foundation that constitute the SCANS skills. Single copies are available
for $31.50, plus $4 for handling from: National Technical Information
Service (NTIS), Technology Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce,
Springfield, VA 22161, 1-800-553-6847. NTIS Order Number: PB92-146711INZ.
This product may also be ordered by fax at (703) 321-8547, or by e-mail at
orders@ntis.fedworld.gov
|
Where
to order What
Work Requires of Schools? National Technical Information
Service (NTIS), Technology Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce,
Springfield, VA 22161, 1-800-553-6847. NTIS Order Number: PB92-146711INZ.
This product may also be ordered by fax at (703) 321-8547, or by e-mail at
orders@ntis.fedworld.gov
Price: Single copies are available
for $31.50, plus $4 for handling.
| Top
|
|
| Home | IEP | Special
Education | Transition | STC
| MI | CREDE | Service
Learning |
|