ITS in Academics
ITS University Workshop #4
September 22-23, 2016 | ITS America Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
Day 1 Presentation | September 22, 2016
ITS Workforce Study Project Overview
Presenter: Anthony Shaw
Presenter's Org: ITS America
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Slide 1: ITS Workforce Study Project Overview
- Goals of the project
- Conceptual framework for understanding the ITS workforce
- Framework Table - compilation and classification of relevant KSAs and tasks
- Industry interviews and subsequent findings
- Main project deliverables
- Spreadsheet-based Framework Table
- Final project report that documents findings
- For this meeting
- Initial findings
- Feedback on conceptual framework
Slide 2: Framework Overview | ITS Workforce Project
Slide 3: Job Description Analysis
[This slide contains a table of job titles for a number of companies.]
Slide 4: Framework: Categories for Analysis
[This slide contains a table with four columns: Generalized Position Type, Sector, Specialty Area or Discipline, and Phase of Project Cycle.]
Slide 5: (No title)
[This slide contains a screenshot of a Microsoft Excel table titled “Framework and interviewee list.” It consists of eight columns: Generalized Position Type, Organization, Sector, KSA/Task, KSA or Task, Specialty Area or Discipline, Additional Specialty Area or Discipline, and Phase of Project Cycle.]
Slide 6: (No title)
[This slide contains a screenshot of the same Microsoft Excel table as the previous slide. A dropdown menu for the column titled “Specialty Area or Discipline” is circled in red.]
Slide 7: (No title)
[This slide contains a screenshot of the same Microsoft Excel table as the previous two slides. A row midway down the table with the Organization name Atkins North America is surrounded by an orange rectangle, as is the column titled “Specialty Area or Discipline.”]
Slide 8: Framework Results
- Created an initial conceptual framework for further analysis of ITS workforce needs and trends
- Compiled a large sample of KSAs and tasks currently required of ITS workforce
- Developed a tool for ITS professionals in positions with authority for hiring and developing the workforce
- Would like feedback from University Workshop participants
Slide 9: Industry Interviews Overview | ITS Workforce Project
Slide 10: Interviewees
- AECOM
- APTA
- Booz Allen Hamilton
- Bridj
- Delaware DOT
- Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission
- HNTB
- Kimley-Horn
- Maricopa County (AZ) DOT
- Michael Baker International
- Michigan DOT
- Montgomery County (MD) DOT
- Parsons Brinckerhoff
- RouteMatch
- Timmons Group
- Washington State DOT
Slide 11: Interviewees, cont’d
[This slide contains a pie chart of Interviewees by Sub-sector: Civil Engineering (10), State DOT (4), County DOT (4), Software (2), Metropolitan Planning Organization (1), Management Consulting (1), and Industry Association (1).]
Slide 12: General Findings
- Variety of position types
- Engineering, technician, business development, project management
- All phases of project cycle
- Interdisciplinary nature
- No single college major on which organizations can recruit/rely on as a pipeline
- Future technology
- Short-term ITS deployment needs outweigh future technology in importance
- Soft skills are highly valued
- Especially as individuals advance
Slide 13: Public Sector Perspectives
- Transportation/traffic engineering is foundational
- Operations knowledge should be leveraged to inform design
- Interdisciplinary knowledge is increasingly important
- Soft skills!
- Written/verbal communications
- Willingness and ability to learn independently
- Task/project management and contracts administration
- No university pipeline - no single major on which to rely for candidates
- Candidate pool lacks education, training, and experience in ITS
- ITS training occurs on the job
- Must compete with private sector for limited candidate pool
- Job specs can be opened up successfully to widen candidate pool
Slide 14: Private Sector Perspectives
- Transportation/traffic engineering is foundational
- Operations knowledge should be leveraged to inform design
- Interdisciplinary knowledge is increasingly important
- Soft skills!
- Written/verbal communications
- Willingness and ability to learn independently
- Task/project management and contracts administration
- No university pipeline - no single major on which to rely for candidates
- Candidate pool lacks education, training, and experience in ITS
- ITS training occurs on the job
- Career paths move towards task/project/program management and business development
- Software and technology companies represent new directions for the ITS workforce
- Come with their own unique needs
Slide 15: Next Steps
- Report: Submit draft report for review
- Framework table: Further refine by separating and consolidating list of KSAs and tasks
- To resemble the NIST Cybersecurity Framework
- Feedback from University Workshop participants:
- On conceptual framework categories and definitions
- Professional Capacity Building: continue to support JPO’s PCB program
- Trainings
- University Workshops
- Others
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