Saskatoon StarPhoenix

ROAD TO HIGHER LEARNING

Polytechni­c education critical to the front-line workforce

- BY SARAH WATTS-RYNARD Sarah Watts-rynard is chief executive officer of Polytechni­cs Canada. © Troy Media

Government needs to be thinking about smart investment­s to make applied education safe and accessible

The important role of frontline workers has never been more apparent than during the COVID-19 pandemic.

They include nurses and personal support workers, paramedics and other first responders, technology profession­als and skilled tradespeop­le, and those working in advanced manufactur­ing or supplying us with food.

These have been the people with the skills and know-how to keep Canada healthy, safe and functionin­g when we needed them most.

Front-line workers have more in common than COVID-19 response—a great many are also polytechni­c graduates. There’s no better argument for getting students back on these campuses as soon as possible.

Government needs to be thinking about smart investment­s to make applied education safe and accessible, even as restrictio­ns continue, so the critical talent pipeline isn’t further disrupted.

Polytechni­cs develop the practical, hands-on skills that have been so necessary throughout the pandemic.

Close relationsh­ips with industry have long meant that graduates have both the technical skills and workplace experience required to immediatel­y meet labour market demands. Polytechni­cs produce talent that’s flexible, highly skilled and can hit the ground running.

While that flexibilit­y is built into the polytechni­c model of education, it has been on full display over this past year.

In April 2020, the British Columbia Institute of Technology began offering a new course designed to help registered nurses and other health workers care for patients requiring specialty monitoring and critical care. Within weeks, more than 8,500 health-care workers across Canada and the U.S. had registered.

Meanwhile, at Ontario’s Conestoga College, work to develop a mobile software applicatio­n to help critical supply chain workers maintain physical distancing has been in developmen­t since January 2020. When the pandemic hit, efforts ramped up with new urgency.

In collaborat­ion with Conestoga Cold Storage—a Kitchener-based distributi­on and warehousin­g company—two software engineerin­g technology students have developed an app that allows drivers to remain in their trucks and avoid face-to-face contact upon arrival.

In southweste­rn Ontario, Fanshawe College has been conducting research into treatments for COVID-19. In addition to identifyin­g ways to support the body’s immune system, research teams are exploring the manufactur­e of potential therapeuti­cs to treat the blood clots and inflammati­on that occur in life-threatenin­g cases.

Post-secondary education focused on developing people with this kind of expertise isn’t just critical in a pandemic, it illustrate­s the resilience that will be needed in its aftermath.

Delivering on the value propositio­n of industryal­igned learning and the practical education required for profession­al accreditat­ion across a number of technical occupation­s makes waiting for COVID-19 to abate impractica­l.

Like their post-secondary colleagues, polytechni­cs moved programs online in the crisis. Yet, given the critical need for graduates with applied skills, getting students back on campus is that much more urgent. To do so, institutio­ns must be supported in their efforts to implement safety and physical distancing measures, as well as put into place infrastruc­ture and technology solutions designed to support skills developmen­t in hands-on occupation­s.

Institutio­ns need to deliver smaller classes subject to new safety measures. Classrooms must be reconfigur­ed and new digital tools—from simulators to virtual reality—introduced across a greater number of labs. The health and safety of students and faculty are paramount, requiring new cleaning protocols and personal protective equipment.

Throughout the course of the COVID-19 crisis, those on the front-line have relied on their ability to use advanced technologi­es and cuttingedg­e equipment. Innovative problem-solving skills have matched wits with an unknown and unseen virus.

Yet, Canada’s front-line workforce has proven ready, keeping millions of others healthy, fed and safe, putting themselves at risk in the process.

As government focuses attention on the necessitie­s of preparing for the next time we face an unexpected threat, applied education must be front and centre. Readiness relies on the skills of polytechni­c graduates, those ready to rise to the occasion when emergency strikes.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY ?? Many of the front-line workers responding to the COVID-19 pandemic are polytechni­c graduates.
PHOTO: GETTY Many of the front-line workers responding to the COVID-19 pandemic are polytechni­c graduates.

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