Term 2 - Module 1

What Skills Do I Have & What Skills Do Others Have?

In this lesson you will reflect on your preferences and skills that will help you identify the steps you need to take to achieve your career goals. As you work through the assignment, you will also reflect on how the value of work in our lives, communities, and society can be viewed from diverse perspectives.

What are essential skills?

The Government of Canada defines essential skills as "skills that people need for work, learning, and life."

These skills are used every day, in the community and in our personal lives, in various forms and levels of complexity.

The link on the left will take you to the Government of Canada - Skills for Success website.

The importance of these skills...


Skills for Success are the skills needed to participate and thrive in learning, work and life. 

Skills for Success include skills that are foundational for building other skills and knowledge and important for effective social interaction. These skills overlap and interact with each other, and with other technical and life skills. They are inclusive and can be adapted to different contexts. 

Skills for Success are for everyone – employers, workers, training providers, governments, and communities. 

Understanding each of these skills

Adaptability

Major changes in society are affecting how you work, live, and learn and require you to constantly adapt to change. Strong adaptability skills will help you deal effectively with change and to learn new skills and behaviours when needed, stay focused on your responsibilities and goals, and not give up when situations are difficult. They will help you stay positive and manage the stress that can come from change in the workplace, community, and your life at home. 

Collaboration

Today people are more connected within communities, across the country, and around the world. Modern workplaces are more diverse, and many jobs require you to work with others from different backgrounds and cultures to complete tasks and solve problems. It is important to be able to work respectfully with people who have different professions, experiences, cultures, and backgrounds.

Collaboration skills help you perform better in a team by understanding how to support and value others, manage difficult interactions and contribute to the team’s work.

Strong collaboration skills help you build and maintain positive relationships with others at work, in school, and in other parts of your life.

Communication

Strong communication skills help you share information in a way that others can clearly understand. You also need strong communication skills to listen to, pay attention to, and understand others. In all jobs, communication skills are important for developing good working relationships with co-workers and clients, including those from different backgrounds and cultures. You also need these skills to work effectively in a team, understand a variety of viewpoints, and to gather and share information while problem solving – whether at work or in your daily life. 

Creativity & Innovation

Creativity and innovation skills help you come up with new, unique, or “outside the box” ideas or to approach something differently than in the past, both at work and outside work. A curious mindset that finds inspiration from a broad range of experiences and perspectives helps develop creativity and innovation skills. Employers are increasingly seeking people who can apply creativity and innovation skills to their work in our increasingly diverse settings, and to come up with new solutions or approaches to tackling challenges. With strong creativity and innovation skills, you can also support and inspire others to develop their own creativity and innovation. 

Digital

Digital technology has changed the way you find and share information, solve problems, and communicate with others. Most jobs now use digital skills, and you need them when you apply other skills such as reading, writing and numeracy.

Digital skills help you keep up with changing demands in the modern workplace and in your daily life.

Numeracy

The modern economy requires numeracy skills that go beyond basic arithmetic. Understanding numbers remains critical to functioning in today’s society. Many jobs require the ability to work with numbers and math.

Numeracy skills are also needed in a wide variety of daily contexts, including managing your finances and making sense of statistics in the news.

Problem Solving

Every day you use information to make decisions, solve problems, and take actions. This can include thinking about different ways to complete a task and choosing the best solution, or deciding what to do first when several activities are competing for your attention. The ability to think, make decisions, and solve problems effectively improves the way you carry out activities, and meet goals and deadlines at work or in other daily life situations.

Strong problem-solving skills will help you gather the right information, identify and solve problems, and make better decisions.

As you learn from these experiences, you will strengthen your problem-solving skills and more quickly and effectively adapt to change.

Reading

Reading helps you to understand and interpret the meaning within the text. Strong reading skills allow you to do your job and to work safely, and efficiently. You use reading skills to learn other skills, for example, by reading online learning resources. Reading is important in day-to-day activities, such as understanding changes in travel advisories and interpreting the important messages in articles. 

Writing

We write to communicate ideas and information to other people. In today’s world, we require writing skills that are suitable for different situations including digital platforms.

Knowing what to write, how much to write, and in which style to write is important. Writing skills ensure your writing is suitable for your purpose, the intended reader, and the context.

Where can you acquire these skills?

As a student there are many ways that you can further develop your skills through your participation in various activities both in and outside of the school setting. Think of the following:

ASSIGNMENT

Part I) What Skills Do I Have?

Complete the following worksheet to analyze what skills and abilities you already have. 

What Skills Do I Have?

Part 2) What Skills Do Others Have?

Your next task is to interview an adult and reflect on their answers. Use the worksheet posted here to help you complete your work.

What Skills Do Others Have?

SUBMIT

Submit your completed assignment in your Flex block Google Classroom.


                                        Due: Monday, Nov 27