[go: up one dir, main page]

Changing Work Organisation and Skill Requirements (Contributed Article) Changing Work Organisation and Skill Requirements (Contributed Article)

Changing Work Organisation and Skill Requirements (Contributed Article‪)‬

Australian Bulletin of Labour 2009, June, 35, 2

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

Context How work is organised is one of the most important factors in determining what skills workers need to do their jobs successfully. Many analysts have argued that recent decades have seen the beginnings of a revolution in work organisation, a revolution that continues and will have ever widening effects in the workforce. No longer will workers be successful if they are able only to complete one small unchanging set of tasks in a workplace that puts together the work of many to produce goods or services. Instead, they will need to be far more flexible, able to fit productively into teams that are formed for specific work tasks or projects that may only be performed once. They will need a new range of skills to negotiate the new, much more changeable, communication-rich and customer-focused world of work. These broad images of change have been expressed in a myriad of ways, with a variety of emphases. They have become almost an article of faith when talking about the likely future of work and skill requirements, often providing the context for various claims. To take one example, a recent NCVER collection on 'generic skills' begins with the assertion that:

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2009
June 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
69
Pages
PUBLISHER
National Institute of Labour Studies Inc.
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
351.7
KB

More Books by Australian Bulletin of Labour

Increasing Retention of Nursing Staff at Hospitals: Aspects of Management and Leadership *. Increasing Retention of Nursing Staff at Hospitals: Aspects of Management and Leadership *.
2005
Nursing Careers: What Motivated Nurses to Choose Their Profession? Nursing Careers: What Motivated Nurses to Choose Their Profession?
2005
Selling Human Services: Public Sector Rationalisation and the Call Centre Labour Process. Selling Human Services: Public Sector Rationalisation and the Call Centre Labour Process.
2003
Transitional Labour Markets: A Social Investment and Risk Mitigation Strategy for Social Policy. Transitional Labour Markets: A Social Investment and Risk Mitigation Strategy for Social Policy.
2006
An Unfair Safety Net?(Invited Paper) An Unfair Safety Net?(Invited Paper)
2010
Minimum Wage Setting Under Fair Work Australia: Back to the Future?(Invited Paper) Minimum Wage Setting Under Fair Work Australia: Back to the Future?(Invited Paper)
2010