References

This database has been compiled to provide a searchable repository on published research addressing “future skills” that will be a useful tool for researchers and individuals interested in the future of work and the future of skills.

The database integrates existing bibliographies focused on future skills and the future of work as well as the results of new ProQuest and Google Scholar searches. The process of building the database also involved consultations with experts and the identification of key research organizations publishing in this area, as well as searches of those organizations’ websites. For a more detailed explanation of how the database was assembled, please read the Future Skills Reference Database Technical Note.

The current database, assembled by future skills researchers at the Diversity Institute, is not exhaustive but represents a first step in building a more comprehensive database. It will be regularly updated and expanded as new material is published and identified. In that vein, we encourage those with suggestions for improvements to this database to connect with us directly at di.fsc@ryerson.ca.

From this database, we also selected 39 key publications and created an Annotated Bibliography. It is designed to serve as a useful tool for researchers, especially Canadian researchers, who may need some initial guidance in terms of the key references in this area.

Search the database

  • Filter by Reference Type
  • Book
  • Book Chapter
  • Journal Article
  • Other
  • White Paper
  • Filter by Year
  • 2024
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • 2021
  • 2020
  • Before 2020
  • Sort By
  • Newest
  • Oldest
  • Alphabetical
Clear all

2914 results

Sorry, no results were found for your query

White Paper

Promoting careers in the skilled trades to Indigenous youth in Canadaexternal link icon

2019: Arrowsmith, E.
This report describes experiential learning opportunities in high school for students interested in learning about the skilled trades. Examples of Indigenous-focused initiatives and the impacts on student outcome are described.
Arrowsmith, E. (2019). Promoting careers in the skilled trades to Indigenous youth in Canada. Ottawa, ON: . Retrieved from https://caf-fca.org/caf_research/promoting-careers-in-the-skilled-trades-to-indigenous-youth-in-canada/.
White Paper

Immigrants and workplace training: Evidence from Canadian linked employer employee dataexternal link icon

2019: Dostie, B. and Javdani, M.
Job training is one of the most important aspects of skill formation and human capital accumulation. In this study we use longitudinal Canadian linked employer-employee data to examine whether white/visible minority immigrants and Canadian-born experience different opportunities in two well-defined measures of firm-sponsored training: on-the-job training and classroom training. While we find no differences in on-the-job training between different groups, our results suggest that visible minority immigrants are significantly less likely to receive classroom training, and receive fewer and shorter classroom training courses, an experience that is not shared by white immigrants. For male visible minority immigrants, these gaps are entirely driven by their differential sorting into workplaces with less training opportunities. For their female counterparts however, they are mainly driven by differences that emerge within workplaces. We find no evidence that years spent in Canada or education level can appreciably reduce these gaps. Accounting for potential differences in career paths and hierarchical level also fails to explain these differences. We find however that these gaps are only experienced by visible minority immigrants who work in the for-profit sector, with those in the non-profit sector experiencing positive or no gaps in training. Finally, we show that other poor labor market outcomes of visible minority immigrants, including their wages and promotion opportunities, stem in part from these training gaps.
Dostie, B. and Javdani, M. (2019). Immigrants and workplace training: Evidence from Canadian linked employer employee data. IZA Discussion Paper:12511. Bonn, Germany: . Retrieved from https://www.iza.org/publications/dp/12511/immigrants-and-workplace-training-evidence-from-canadian-linked-employer-employee-data.
White Paper

Youth + jobs = better futureexternal link icon

2018: Canadian Apprenticeship Forum - Forum canadien sur l'apprentissage
The Canadian Apprenticeship Forum – Forum canadien sur l'apprentissage (CAF-FCA) wanted to understand what today’s youth, especially diverse youth, are thinking about skilled trades careers. This report integrates feedback from youth workshop participants (aged 14 to 25) (N=232) and their influencers, who completed an online survey (N=41)
Canadian Apprenticeship Forum - Forum canadien sur l'apprentissage (CAF-FCA). (2018). Youth + jobs = better future. Ottawa, ON: . Retrieved from http://caf-fca.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/YouthJobsBetterFutureinteractive.pdf.
White Paper

Are the career prospects of postsecondary graduates improving?external link icon

2019: Frenette, M.
Given the time and money invested in higher education by students, parents and governments, there is considerable interest in the economic outcomes of postsecondary graduates. Most assessments of recent graduates have focused on their short-term, early labour market results. As new entrants to the labour force, recent postsecondary graduates may be particularly vulnerable to the economic cycle. Consequently, comparisons of short-term outcomes across graduating cohorts may be highly dependent on prevailing economic conditions and may not reflect the longer-term returns on investments. This is the first study to compare the long-term labour market outcomes of two cohorts of young postsecondary graduates using linked census and tax data. Specifically, graduates who were 26 to 35 years old in 1991 were followed from 1991 to 2005 (when they were 40 to 49 years old) and compared with a similarly aged 2001 cohort, which was followed from 2001 to 2015.The results suggest that median cumulative earnings were higher among members of the more recent cohort of male and female postsecondary graduates. Increases were observed across all postsecondary levels and across most major disciplines where sample sizes were large enough to permit analysis. Also, no discipline registered a decline in cumulative earnings. Although the economic conditions faced by the 2001 cohort over the 15-year study period were generally more favourable, this cohort also registered higher earnings than the 1991 cohort during the latter portion of the period (i.e., when the 2001 cohort was faced with an economic recession). Furthermore, the initial labour market conditions upon graduation (an important determinant of career earnings) were similar for both cohorts. The improvements in long-term earnings for postsecondary graduates are important in light of the significant increase in the number of graduates over the period. However, the results also indicate that the number of years of union membership declined or remained steady across cohorts of male and female postsecondary graduates. Furthermore, while women with postsecondary qualifications registered increases in the number of years of employer-sponsored pension plan coverage, their male counterparts experienced mixed results depending on their level of postsecondary studies.
Frenette, M. (2019). Are the career prospects of postsecondary graduates improving?. Statistics Canada Analytical Studies Branch research paper series:3. Ottawa, ON: . Retrieved from https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/11f0019m/11f0019m2019003-eng.htm.
White Paper

Stop talking about the future of workexternal link icon

2019: Andrews, J., Rolland, L. and Gillard, A.
In this report we focus on the way technology is reshaping work. However we must integrate this insight with a broader understanding of the important influences of a globalising world, unprecedented slowing of growth, ageing across the working age population globally and an uncertain political and economic outlook. These, along with technology, are reshaping both labour supply and demand, and the content, structure and location of work.
Andrews, J., Rolland, L. and Gillard, A. (2019). Stop talking about the future of work. Sydney, New South Wales: . Retrieved from https://assets.ey.com/content/dam/ey-sites/ey-com/en_au/topics/campaigns/future-of-work/stop-talking-about-future-of-work.pdf.
White Paper

Nondegree credentials, work-based learning, and the American working classexternal link icon

2019: Columbus, R.
Key Points; Accounting for nondegree credentials and training—sub-baccalaureate certificates, industry certifications, professional licenses, work-experience programs, and apprenticeships—provides a more complete portrait of credential and skills attainment than regular measures of educational attainment do. Thirty-two percent of the working class—defined as adults 25–64 with a high school degree but no bachelor’s degree and who reported incomes between $20,000 and $40,000—has a license, certification, or certificate. Surprisingly, nondegree credentials in health care are more common than credentials in the trades for working-class credential-holding adults, while credentials in the trades are more prevalent for upper-income credential-holding adults. This suggests that credentials in the trades may present viable pathways to higher earnings. Nondegree credentials and work-experience programs are often presented as alternatives to postsecondary education. However, these credentials and programs supplement college degrees for higher-educated adults more often than serving as alternatives to degrees for less-educated adults.
Columbus, R. (2019). Nondegree credentials, work-based learning, and the American working class. Washington, DC: . Retrieved from http://www.aei.org/publication/nondegree-credentials-work-based-learning-and-the-american-working-class/.
White Paper

Better use of skills in the workplace: Why it matters for productivity and local jobsexternal link icon

2017: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
This joint OECD-ILO report provides a comparative analysis of case studies focusing on improving skills use in the workplace across eight countries. The examples provide insights into the practical ways in which employers interact with government services and policies at the local level. They highlight the need to build policy coherence across employment, skills, economic development and innovation policies, and underline the importance of ensuring that skills utilisation is built into policy development thinking and implementation. Skills utilisation concerns the extent to which skills are effectively applied in the workplace to maximise workplace and individual performance. It involves a mix of policies including work organisation, job design, technology adaptation, innovation, employee-employer relations, human resource development practices and business-product market strategies. It is often at the local level that the interface of these factors can best be addressed.
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and International Labour Organisation (ILO). (2017). Better use of skills in the workplace: Why it matters for productivity and local jobs. . Retrieved from http://www.skillsforemployment.org/KSP/en/Details/?dn=WCMSTEST4_194104.
White Paper

Digital skills for life and workexternal link icon

2017: Broadband Commission Working Group on Education.
The report highlights the emergence of a new global skills gap where gender, class, geography and age can have a huge impact on whether a person is able to harness new technologies or not. It also presents strategies for ensuring all groups of people can develop these skills.
Broadband Commission Working Group on Education. (2017). Digital skills for life and work. Paris, France: . Retrieved from http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0025/002590/259013e.pdf.
White Paper

Connecting young adults to skills and jobs: Lessons from the National Fund's sectoral strategiesexternal link icon

2017: Spangler, D. and O'Sullivan, K.
Consistent with its commitment to creating opportunity and improving local and regional economies, the National Fund promotes strategies that use sector or industry partnerships to support young adults in developing in-demand skills, preparing for a successful career, and securing a job. Stubbornly high young adult unemployment rates persist in the wake of the Great Recession, and, if unaddressed, could have long-lasting negative consequences not only for young workers, but also for the communities where they live. In response, the National Fund and its partners are working to determine how its sectoral models might be adapted and utilized to address young adults’ employment challenges. This report documents emerging practices from the National Fund’s young adult work to date, and also provides a context for understanding the status of young adult sectoral work nationally. Specifically, the report: Describes the short history of young adult sectoral work; Highlights aspects of the National Fund’s YA Initiative; Lifts up lessons from the communities involved in the YA Initiative; Provides recommendations to advance this work.
Spangler, D. and O'Sullivan, K. (2017). Connecting young adults to skills and jobs: Lessons from the National Fund's sectoral strategies. Washington, DC: . Retrieved from https://nationalfund.org/learning-evaluation/publications/connecting-youth-to-skills/.

external link icon

paywall icon