Integrating EES
Essential Employability Skills are taught and assessed with intent: in addition to vocational learning, each program provides specific learning opportunities to ensure that graduates have the skills they need for the workplace. Integrating these skills into the program requires planning and insight.
Consider how skills are practiced in your specific field: How do skilled workers identify problems and solve them? How do they convey information to clients or patients? How often do they interact with others whose experience and viewpoints differ from their own? Do they develop budgets and schedules? How do teams function in your field to complete projects? Ensuring that your students have a chance to develop these skills in college will help them enter the workforce prepared to function effectively.
The 11 EES fall into six broader skill categories: communication (EES 1 and 2), numeracy (EES 3), critical thinking (EES 4 and 5), information management (EES 6 and 7), interpersonal (EES 8 and 9), and personal (10 and 11). Likely, you are already addressing EES in your course through your lessons, projects, evaluations, and group activities. Be sure that your course outline and Course Section Information provide adequate detail and specific language that will help to identify them.
The skills you teach are described in the Course Learning Requirements (CLR), and the verbs you use help to show the extent to which a skill is demonstrated. As a result, the choice of verbs is significant. For example, to describe a course’s successful student as one who “will have the ability to … understand [x]” is too vague, so ask yourself how that understanding is demonstrated. Are you asking students to analyze a situation, solve a problem using a specific strategy, calculate quantities, measure amounts, interact with a working team, schedule a project, report on progress, self–assess a personal performance, or gather information with a specific database? Taking time to clarify what your students actually do makes identifying EES easier.
The verbs analyze and solve suggest EES 4 and 5; calculate and measure indicate EES 3; interact EES 9; schedule EES 10; report EES 1; self-assess EES 11; and gather EES 6. It can sometimes be difficult to recognize the specific elements of performance that make up a particular task, so training yourself to be very precise may take a bit of work.
Course outline writers often ask the following questions.
“Because I hold class discussions, I can say that I am I teaching EES 8 (showing respect for diverse opinions, values, belief systems, and contributions of others) and EES 9 (interacting with others in groups in ways that contribute to effective working relationships).”
If your class discussions intentionally reflect on the interactions of the group, then you are teaching these skills. When the open exchange of ideas and what facilitates it becomes a subject of discussion, students have an opportunity to learn how to be part of a respectful dialogue, how to see an issue from an alternative perspective, and how to approach differences of culture, gender, and race. The key is to give students a chance to think about, develop, and practice the methods of interaction that draw out the best of what other people can contribute.
“My deadlines are strict, so I’m addressing EES 10 (managing the use of time and other resources to complete projects) and EES 11 (taking responsibility for one’s own actions, decisions, and consequences).”
Documenting EES in your course outline
How do I know which EES I should be teaching?
EES are required for Ontario College Certificate, Ontario College Diploma and Ontario College Advanced Diploma programs. (College Certificate, Graduate Certificate, and degree programs do not require EES.)
The eleven EES are taught throughout each program to which they apply, with students given opportunities to learn and practice before completing a culminating performance. You may have inherited a course outline with EES already identified, or you may have a new course to which EES need to be assigned. In either case, because EES are taught across a program, your course will be responsible for only some of the EES, not all of them. The general rule is to include a maximum of 5 EES in a particular course. Fewer EES are recommended, and, depending on the focus, some courses may not teach or assess any EES at all. The important thing is that all 11 skills are covered within the program as a whole.
If you are a course outline writer
- Your first step should be to consult with your program coordinator regarding the skills assigned to your course: which EES is the program expecting you to teach or assess?
- Secondly, consider those skills in relation to your curriculum: does it make sense that your course addresses this skill? Is it a good fit with the learning outcomes for your course? If so, full steam ahead; if not, your coordinator should be advised.
- If the EES don’t seem to be a good fit, but you are told that the course needs to cover these particular skills, you might need some help figuring out how to adapt the curriculum. This is a conversation that affects more than just a single course: request assistance!
If you are a program coordinator
- Look at EES mapping across your program annually: check to be sure you are addressing all the skills by generating the two EES reports available on COMMS. Make sure that your program offers teaching, assessment, and culminating performances for each skill.
- Look for reasonable balance in the number of times each skill is taught and assessed.
- Ensure that the program includes two culminating performances for each EES.
- Meet with faculty teaching in the program to review where EES have been assigned. If the allocations make sense, the process is relatively straightforward. If you have gaps and need help determining how to fill them, request curriculum help.
Is this teaching, assessing, or a culminating performance?
How many EES can I include?
Am I choosing the right EES for my course?
How does my course outline show that an EES is taught?
How does my course outline show that an EES is assessed?
Is this a culminating performance?
Where else in my outline do I need to think about EES?
How does my course outline affect the program?