Difference between revisions of "Disability/Employment/Theory of Change"
From Social Collaborative Singapore
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! rowspan="3" style="background: #CEE0F2;" |<big>Employers are willing to hire PWDs</big> | ! rowspan="3" style="background: #CEE0F2;" |<big>Employers are willing to hire PWDs</big> | ||
! rowspan="3" style="background: #CEE0F2;" |'''<big>→</big>''' | ! rowspan="3" style="background: #CEE0F2;" |'''<big>→</big>''' | ||
− | ! rowspan=" | + | ! rowspan="3" style="background: #DDA0DD;" |<big>The workplace is inclusive</big> |
− | ! rowspan=" | + | ! rowspan="6" style="background: #DDA0DD;" |<big>→</big> |
− | ! rowspan=" | + | ! rowspan="6" style="background: #FFF8DC;" |<big>Disabled people can secure, retain and progress in their careers</big> |
|- | |- | ||
! style="background: #CEE0F2;" |<big>[[Disability/Employment/Theory of Change#Employers know how to accommodate PWDs.27 needs .E2.86.92 Employers are willing to hire PWDs|Employers know how to accommodate PWDs' needs]]</big> | ! style="background: #CEE0F2;" |<big>[[Disability/Employment/Theory of Change#Employers know how to accommodate PWDs.27 needs .E2.86.92 Employers are willing to hire PWDs|Employers know how to accommodate PWDs' needs]]</big> | ||
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! style="background: #CEE0F2;" |<big>[[Disability/Employment/Theory of Change#Employers find it financially feasible to hire PWDs .E2.86.92 Employers are willing to hire PWDs|Employers find it financially feasible to hire PWDs]]</big> | ! style="background: #CEE0F2;" |<big>[[Disability/Employment/Theory of Change#Employers find it financially feasible to hire PWDs .E2.86.92 Employers are willing to hire PWDs|Employers find it financially feasible to hire PWDs]]</big> | ||
! style="background: #CEE0F2;" |<big>→</big> | ! style="background: #CEE0F2;" |<big>→</big> | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="background: #F2DACE;" |<big>[[Disability/Employment/Theory of Change#PWDs fully understand their suitability for job options .2F career paths .E2.86.92 PWDs secure jobs in open.2Fsheltered employment|PWDs fully understand their suitability for job options/career paths]]</big> | ! style="background: #F2DACE;" |<big>[[Disability/Employment/Theory of Change#PWDs fully understand their suitability for job options .2F career paths .E2.86.92 PWDs secure jobs in open.2Fsheltered employment|PWDs fully understand their suitability for job options/career paths]]</big> | ||
! colspan="3" style="background: #F2DACE;" |<big>→</big> | ! colspan="3" style="background: #F2DACE;" |<big>→</big> | ||
− | ! rowspan="3" |<big>PWDs | + | ! rowspan="3" |<big>PWDs are best positioned to secure jobs</big> |
|- | |- | ||
! style="background: #F2DACE;" |<big>[[Disability/Employment/Theory of Change#PWDs know about available job opportunities .E2.86.92 PWDs secure jobs in open.2Fsheltered employment|PWDs know about available job opportunities]]</big> | ! style="background: #F2DACE;" |<big>[[Disability/Employment/Theory of Change#PWDs know about available job opportunities .E2.86.92 PWDs secure jobs in open.2Fsheltered employment|PWDs know about available job opportunities]]</big> | ||
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! style="background: #E0F2CE;" |<big>→</big> | ! style="background: #E0F2CE;" |<big>→</big> | ||
|} | |} | ||
+ | * '''Employment discrimination?''' | ||
+ | * '''Should we be aspiring to career progression?''' | ||
=== <span style="background:#CEE0F2">'''Employers understand PWD capabilities → Employers are willing to hire PWDs'''</span> === | === <span style="background:#CEE0F2">'''Employers understand PWD capabilities → Employers are willing to hire PWDs'''</span> === | ||
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|Takeup rate is low, and many employers don’t know about the ODP despite its attractiveness. | |Takeup rate is low, and many employers don’t know about the ODP despite its attractiveness. | ||
* Listen to interview with DPA on CNA The Pulse [https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/podcasts/the-pulse/people-with-disability-employment-discrimination-protection-work-11521580 10 May episode]. | * Listen to interview with DPA on CNA The Pulse [https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/podcasts/the-pulse/people-with-disability-employment-discrimination-protection-work-11521580 10 May episode]. | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |'''[https://www.wsg.gov.sg/programmes-and-initiatives/workfare-training-support-employers.html Workfare Training Support (WTS) Scheme]''' | ||
+ | * For Singaporean PWDs aged 13 and above and who don’t earn more than $2,000 a month, their employers can qualify for 95% course fee subsidy and absentee payroll funding when they sign employees up for any course approved for WTS-eligible courses | ||
+ | |Accessing SkillsFuture training courses remain difficult for some. A blind individual with a Master’s degree in counselling called SG Enable asking for help to navigate available subsidies for training such as the WTS, but she was offered Sheltered Workshop training instead. | ||
| | | | ||
|} | |} | ||
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|Supported employment models? | |Supported employment models? | ||
* Currently there are some PWDs who are not able to gain employment in open market but reject sheltered employment [tasks are too simple and allowance is low (<$300/month)] | * Currently there are some PWDs who are not able to gain employment in open market but reject sheltered employment [tasks are too simple and allowance is low (<$300/month)] | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | === <big>'''PWDs are best positioned to secure jobs <span style="background:#E0F2CE">→</span>'''</big> '''<big>Disabled people can secure, retain and progress in their careers</big>''' === | ||
+ | {| class="wikitable" | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | style="width: 33.3%;" |'''<big>Programmes</big>''' | ||
+ | | style="width: 33.3%;" |'''<big>Gaps</big>''' | ||
+ | | style="width: 33.3%;" |'''<big>Ideas</big>''' | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |'''[https://eservice1.enable.gov.sg/MSFPortal/EDS/Employment/Pages/Common/Index/Index.aspx SG Enable — Disability Employment Jobs Portal]''' | ||
+ | * Job portal for PwDs to search for opportunities | ||
+ | |Jobs listed on most job portals do not reflect if the hiring company is interested to employ PWDs. Career events are not always universally designed as well. | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | * Employers can reflect if they are keen to employ PWDs, at career events, on job portals and other avenues. | ||
+ | * Having a “ready-to-hire PWDs” mark would ease PWDs’ job search process. | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |There is a lack of commensurable jobs/job-matching when it comes to highly-skilled PWDs. | ||
+ | * In 2011, a blind individual with a master’s degree in professional counselling was offered an hourly paid telemarketer job when they approached a job placement and support agency in 2011. | ||
+ | | | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 11:28, 4 March 2020
Click on each outcome in the Theory of Change to explore services, gaps and ideas for each outcome.
Contents
- 1 Theory of Change
- 1.1 Employers understand PWD capabilities → Employers are willing to hire PWDs
- 1.2 Employers know how to accommodate PWDs' needs → Employers are willing to hire PWDs
- 1.3 Employers find it financially feasible to hire PWDs → Employers are willing to hire PWDs
- 1.4 PWDs fully understand their suitability for job options / career paths → PWDs secure jobs in open/sheltered employment
- 1.5 PWDs know about available job opportunities → PWDs secure jobs in open/sheltered employment
- 1.6 PWDs acquire work skills → PWDs apply work skills in actual settings
- 1.7 PWDs are best positioned to secure jobs → Disabled people can secure, retain and progress in their careers
Theory of Change
Short-Term Outcomes (skills, knowledge, attitudes) | Mid-Term Outcomes (behaviours) | Long-Term Outcomes(impact) | Social Impact | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Employers understand PWD capabilities | → | Employers are willing to hire PWDs | → | The workplace is inclusive | → | Disabled people can secure, retain and progress in their careers |
Employers know how to accommodate PWDs' needs | → | |||||
Employers find it financially feasible to hire PWDs | → | |||||
PWDs fully understand their suitability for job options/career paths | → | PWDs are best positioned to secure jobs | ||||
PWDs know about available job opportunities | → | |||||
PWDs acquire work skills | → | PWDs apply work skills in actual settings | → |
- Employment discrimination?
- Should we be aspiring to career progression?
Employers understand PWD capabilities → Employers are willing to hire PWDs
Programmes | Gaps | Ideas |
Inclusive Business Forum (IBF) and “Fostering Inclusion At The Workplace” Seminar
|
Can there be more opportunities to dialogue with employers or partners such as WSG/MOM, such that the process may be more institutionalised/supported? | |
SG Enable employer resources
|
||
Inclusive Employers in Singapore |
Employers know how to accommodate PWDs' needs → Employers are willing to hire PWDs
Programmes | Gaps | Ideas |
SG Enable employer resources
|
||
Disability education training for employers and co-workers of PWDs
|
PWDs continue to face discrimination in the workplace: see 2015 study by DPA and this DPA-IPS 2016-2017 participatory research |
|
Employers find it financially feasible to hire PWDs → Employers are willing to hire PWDs
Programmes | Gaps | Ideas |
Special Employment Credit (SEC)
|
||
Open Door Programme
|
Takeup rate is low, and many employers don’t know about the ODP despite its attractiveness.
|
|
Workfare Training Support (WTS) Scheme
|
Accessing SkillsFuture training courses remain difficult for some. A blind individual with a Master’s degree in counselling called SG Enable asking for help to navigate available subsidies for training such as the WTS, but she was offered Sheltered Workshop training instead. |
PWDs fully understand their suitability for job options / career paths → PWDs secure jobs in open/sheltered employment
Programmes | Gaps | Ideas |
BizLink Vocational Assessment Service
|
||
ARC Employability & Employment Centre (E2C) Programme
|
An individual with autism received vocational assistance from ARC; he paid $494 (after subsidy) for the vocational assessment but was deemed unemployable, yet managed to secure a job later at Dignity Kitchen.
|
|
SG Enable — Job Advisory
|
PWDs know about available job opportunities → PWDs secure jobs in open/sheltered employment
Programmes | Gaps | Ideas |
SG Enable — Disability Employment Jobs Portal
|
Jobs listed on most job portals do not reflect if the hiring company is interested to employ PWDs. Career events are not always universally designed as well. |
|
There is a lack of commensurable jobs/job-matching when it comes to highly-skilled PWDs.
|
PWDs acquire work skills → PWDs apply work skills in actual settings
Programmes | Gaps | Ideas |
Transition/vocational training programmes across the various SPED schools: list here | Some SPED students have difficulty mastering job skills training even when approaching graduation/18 years old. | Allow SPED students to attend courses ad-hoc, after graduation, taking into consideration income loss too. |
SPED school graduates lack internship opportunities during their school-going years. SPED schools and VWOs typically have to get their own contacts. | Have a central coordinator that facilitates the internship process, or have more opportunities to dialogue with partners like WSG/MOM. | |
Skills taught in WSQ- and WPLN- certified courses may not always be retained, nor applied. | ||
Because of job tracking, SPED graduates tend to lack information on job opportunities beyond their track, e.g., ex-student who worked in Coffee Bean switched to forklift driving. | Explore the feasibility of freelance/cottage industry labour, evergreen sectors like waste management, funeral parlour work, and purposeful job re-designs. | |
Lack of information on job opportunity and industry trends that SPED schools usually train their students to enter. | ||
Study European apprenticeship models to improve on vocational training and transition planning. | ||
Mountbatten Vocational School - ITE Skills Certificate (ISC)
|
||
Metta School’s Vocational Certification Programme-
Institute of Technical Education Skills Certificate (ISC)
|
||
Metta School’s Employment Pathway Programme (EPP)
|
||
APSN Delta Senior School’s Vocational Certification Programme - Singapore Workforce Skills Qualifications (WSQ)
|
||
MINDS Employment Development Centres (EDCs)
Provides vocational training for adults with intellectual disabilities aged 18 and above:
|
||
Vocational Training
For post-primary school students, available at:
|
||
Vocational Training in SPED Schools | ||
Rise Mentorship Programme
|
||
IHL Internship Programme
|
||
Training Programmes at SG Enable: list here | ||
Cerebral Palsy Alliance Singapore – Goodwill, Rehabilitation and Occupational Workshop (GROW)
|
||
Singapore Association for the Visually Handicapped - Skills Development Programme
|
||
Sheltered Workshops
|
Some PWDs may find sheltered employment too easy/not challenging, yet be unsuited for open employment. | Supported employment models?
|
PWDs are best positioned to secure jobs → Disabled people can secure, retain and progress in their careers
Programmes | Gaps | Ideas |
SG Enable — Disability Employment Jobs Portal
|
Jobs listed on most job portals do not reflect if the hiring company is interested to employ PWDs. Career events are not always universally designed as well. |
|
There is a lack of commensurable jobs/job-matching when it comes to highly-skilled PWDs.
|