Aurora Institute Calls for Federal Policy to Advance Work-Based Learning
        
        
        
			- By Kate Lucariello
 - 08/01/23
 
		
        In  a new report titled “Expanding Student Access to Work-Based  Learning: Federal Policy Recommendations,” education research  organization Aurora  Institute calls for policy-makers to “let  go of the notion that education has to be a linear, time-bound  sequence of learning that occurs only within formal education  institutions.”
Instead,  the Department  of Education (ED) and other governmental arms should  develop policies that view education as an “ecosystem” of  cooperation and alignment across pre-K–12, career technical  education, college/university, workforce, and community sectors. If  the feds lead this effort, the report advises, state and local  educational efforts to meet critical work skills needs will no longer  be roadblocked.
The  report notes there is bipartisan support for work-based learning, as  outlined in a 2019  ED federal notice supporting apprenticeships,  internships, and other opportunities. These can benefit students with  Pell grant eligibility if a part of their work-based learning wages  are Federal Work Study wages, and benefit employers by sharing the  employment cost of apprenticeship programs.
    
The  Aurora report’s key recommendations at the federal level are to:
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 Institute a federal cross-agency program and fund it with grants to  	promote work-based learning awareness and opportunities from pre-K  	level and up;
     
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 Increase federal innovation grants to states and organizations to  	encourage access to and incentivize work-based learning  	opportunities, including funding training for educators and other  	work-based learning providers;
     
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 Make intermediary organizations eligible for federal funding to  	support work-based learning partnerships across state, regional, and  	local entities;
     
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 Allow more flexibility in funding to allow resources to be  	simplified, combined and blended; and
     
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 Redesign accountability reporting to be reciprocal for elementary  	and secondary frameworks, as well as family, community, and  	workforce input to help integrate work-based learning and career  	exploration.
     
There  are also recommendations for states to implement or build upon the  foregoing, with federal support.
“In  the context of rapid change in education and the workforce, policy  makers need to take a long view on the future of education and work,”  the report concludes. “The system needs to be reorganized to build  knowledge and skills in the midst of changing trends, with more  aligned structures, incentives, and supports for learner-centered  pathways.”
The  report is available on this Aurora  Institute page.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kate Lucariello is a former newspaper editor, EAST Lab high school teacher and college English teacher.