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US tradies provide a beacon of light for Australia



It seems Australians have much to gain from the innovative approaches used in the US and elsewhere to

young enthusiastic female builder on a construction site

attract people to trade skill careers.

Tumwater High School in Washington called on its construction trades students to put their developing skills, knowledge and experience to use and create a new greenhouse for the school.

Students from the school's advanced construction trades class found the project challenging and not as easy as anticipated, though in the end it proved to be a rewarding and satisfying experience; an experience embodied in a glasshouse which will long stand as a material reminder of their talent, hard-work, dedication and legacy to school.

Tumwater's students felt they were forced to think outside the square and implement innovative strategies in building the greenhouse, which was needed for the school's expanding horticulture program. The kit's aluminium frame, which didn't come with all the screws that it required, needed to be bent, cut and adjusted in order for it to match the measurements for the concrete slab floor.

 

Their construction trades teacher, Steve Eliason, feels this has been a worthwhile process, forcing the students to confront and overcome setbacks and difficulties, which consequently strengthens their knowledge and abilities; as he said "The kids are seeing what it's like in the real world."outdoor greenhouse with plants

After the greenhouse project, the advanced construction trades classes will work on a stick-built potting shed and a shed for equipment for the athletic fields - after-all education and skills-development is a process which never stops.

How does this international snapshot of trades-skills relate to the contemporary issue of skills-shortage in Australia?

American trades-people, construction workers in particular, may soon be of direct assistance to Australia as the US economy slows down and Australia step up its skilled migrant in-take to address skills shortages.

 

According to the policy chief executive of the Housing Industry Association (HIA) , Chris Lamont, "the US is expecting to downgrade its construction activity forecast..." and it would only be logical to offer employment here for American trades-people left redundant, a move which would solve their desperate situation and also, hopefully, as Lamont said, "arrest this significant deficiency in skills that currently prevail" in Australia.

The Housing Industry Association (HIA) has called for a special visa scheme to recruit 15,000 construction workers from abroad as a potential solution to Australia's building-trade apprentice scarcity and Prime Minister Kevin Rudd commented on Monday that the government would lend consideration to the scheme.

 

 



Skills Shortage Stats

- 'skills shortage' is not an easy term to define or statistically measure, but it is essentially a situation in which there are unfilled vacancies in positions where salaries are the same as those currently being paid to others of the same type and quality. (Arrow and Capron 1959, p.307)

- A study conducted by the National Institute of Labour Studies from Flinders University revealed that even in times of relatively high unemployment (such as now - Australia is experiencing the lowest rate of unemployment in thirty years, at 4.9% in May 2006) employers frequently cite skills shortages as one of the major business difficulties they face.

Related Information  Related Information

  • Info and Research Findings on Australia's Skills Shortage
  • Housing Industry Association
  • Courses in Building and Construction


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