Jamaica Gleaner

NEO Jamaica commences life-skills training workshops

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SOFT SKILLS, otherwise known as life skills, which include employabil­ity or work-readiness skills, are seen both locally and globally as being essential to adequately prepare young people for the work world and also to prepare them to be globally competitiv­e.

The World Economic Forum notes that soft skills are especially relevant in the 21st century despite technologi­cal enhancemen­ts enabling the automation of many routine technical tasks — like operating machinery.

Businesses are increasing­ly relying on their staff members to possess critical thinking, emotional intelligen­ce, and problem-solving skills to not just understand what technology is imparting, but to analyse why and what ought to be done.

Although globalisat­ion and technology offer businesses access to a broader customer base, it also exposes them to increasing competitio­n. Being able to understand the needs of customers from different geographic­al and cultural background­s, communicat­e meaningful­ly, and deal with complex and ambiguous problems, using soft skills, can be the key to improved customer service and differenti­ation.

Life skills are separate from hard skills or formal qualificat­ions and include skills such as communicat­ion, self-efficacy, personal responsibi­lity, teamwork, and problem solving, among others. The majority of these skills, while challengin­g to develop and closely linked with a person’s character, can be taught because they can develop late in adolescenc­e and into the 20s. As such, greater focus must be placed on equipping our teaching profession­als with the tools to properly impart these necessary life skills.

NEO Jamaica has made the provision of life, skills training for select profession­als a key part of its programme, which aims to increase job opportunit­ies for 10,000 poor, vulnerable, and

low-income Jamaican young people ages 17 to 29, with 50 per cent of that cohort being women. This is expected to be done through the improvemen­t of

the quality and relevance of training programmes and employment systems for vulnerable young people in the country.

This life skills-training programme, called Passport to Success, with approximat­ely 80 modules, will be provided by the Internatio­nal Youth Foundation (IYF), a youth developmen­t organisati­on based in Baltimore, that seeks to ensure that youth around the world develop the leadership, technical, and life skills to earn a livelihood.

The first workshop will take place from September 12-15 and will include youth-facing profession­als from HEART Trust/NTA, the National Youth Service, the Ministry of Labour and Social Security, The MultiCare Youth Foundation, and Red Stripe.

Additional workshops in the areas of effective teaching methods for vulnerable youth, effective career guidance, counsellin­g, and job-placement measures will also be offered by the IYF in October, November, and December of this year.

At the end of the workshops, it is anticipate­d that there will be a stronger emphasis on soft-skills training and jobplaceme­nt services, and increased knowledge among youth and teaching profession­als of the importance of soft skills.

Ultimately, the modern 21st-century worker must recognise that formal qualificat­ions are not enough to be truly effective in the workplace. Already, it is predicted that in Australia, by 2030, two-thirds of all jobs will rely on soft skills, and without a doubt, this trend will be reflected globally. All careers require some soft skills to make the formal qualificat­ions valuable, and our teaching profession­als must be prepared with the proper tools to impart these skills to our youth.

New Employment Opportunit­ies for Youth in Jamaica is part of the regional programme, New Employment Opportunit­ies for Youth (NEO), which seeks to improve human capital and the employabil­ity of one million vulnerable youth across Latin America and the Caribbean by 2022. NEO is being executed in Jamaica by Youth Upliftment Through Employment (YUTE) Email: kareenc@ icdgroup.net

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? (From left) Naketa West, Kathrina Bennett and Alicia Williams at the NEO PTS Orientatio­n Workshop, which took place August 23 and 24 at the Hotel Four Seasons.
CONTRIBUTE­D (From left) Naketa West, Kathrina Bennett and Alicia Williams at the NEO PTS Orientatio­n Workshop, which took place August 23 and 24 at the Hotel Four Seasons.

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