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Sunday, July 6, 2025
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Kenyan Diaspora: Job Training That Works

Kenyan Diaspora: Job Training That Works
Kenyan Diaspora: Job Training That Works

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Janet Murumba wasnโ€™t always handy with a power drill. The Kenyan immigrant arrived in Seattle at age 30 with a high school education and no skills to speak of. What she did have was ambition. After a couple of years toiling in nursing homes, she set her sights onBoeing (BA). Last year she enrolled in a certificate program in industrial engineering at South Seattle College, which combines vocational education with academics. โ€œIn class,โ€ she says, โ€œI could drill for the first time, and it was like, โ€˜Oh God, itโ€™s happening, itโ€™s real.โ€™โ€‰โ€

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Murumba was lucky to find her way to a college at the forefront of an important trend in American educationโ€”close collaboration with business. Employers, schools, and government agencies are learning to work together to fill jobs requiring โ€œmiddleโ€ skillsโ€”more than a high school diploma but less than a bachelorโ€™s degree. The best community colleges and other training programs are preparing students for the jobs of today and tomorrow, not yesterday. Theyโ€™re imparting education when and where students are most likely to absorb it, in keeping with a maxim of Lou Mobley, who started executive education at IBM(IBM): โ€œEducation is effective only at the time of felt need and clear relevance.โ€ And employers are recognizing certificates like Murumbaโ€™s that attest to mastery of specific skills, sometimes in lieu of insisting on a two- or four-year diploma.

When it comes to getting people jobs, this isnโ€™t the whole ball of wax, to be sure. Economic growth is essential. And career training is no substitute for general knowledge of the arts and sciences: cosmetology ainโ€™t cosmology. But if this initiative succeeds, it will produce a stronger middle class and a more competitive U.S. economy. It could even help divided places such as Ferguson, Mo., which is seething over the Aug.ย 9 police shooting of an unarmed black teen. โ€œThere are very few problems in life that a good job canโ€™t fix,โ€ says Michael McMillan, chief executive officer of the Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis, which runs workforce development in Ferguson and other towns.

Source-businessweek.com

Kenyan Diaspora: Job Training That Works

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