The CCCD working groups met as a collective January 28, 2015. During this meeting each of the working groups reviewed their mandates and set priorities for the year ahead. Below is an update on their progress in 2014 and their plans for 2015.

TheNational Career Development Challenge (NCDC)

Chair: Dave Redekopp, Life-Role Development Group

Mandate:The National Career Development Challenge (NCDC) is an on-line quiz with a primary goal of raising national awareness of career development. A secondary aim is to educate those who complete the challenge through interactive feedback to their answers. The quiz also evaluates each participant’s competence (skill) and motivation (will) in the area of career development. The aggregate results can be used to get media attention and focus future intervention efforts within the field.

Update: The NCDC quiz was launched in October 2014, just prior to Canada Career Development Week (November 2014). This project could not have been possible without the contribution of in-kind hours from the working group and donations from CCPA, CCCD, LRDG, CPC, CareerCycles, Career Cruising and RQuODE. The quiz garnered media attention, including TV appearances and radio interviews, thanks to the marketing and PR efforts of ImpactPublic Affairs and the CCCD network.Over 3600 individuals completed the quiz. With a few adjustments, the NCDC would like to run the challenge again during Canada Career Week 2015. The group is actively seeking funding sources to support revisions and marketing and enhance their ability to analyze and report results.

Certification Working Group

Chair: Paula Wischoff Yerama, CDAA

Mandate: This group promotes collaboration and greater cohesion across provincial certification initiatives. All provinces with existing or emerging career practitioner certification are active members. The group has been instrumental in supporting the formation of new provincial professional associations and certification. It is now grappling collectively with issues of reciprocity and national harmonization.

Update: In 2014, the Certification working group formally requested that “Career Development Practitioner” be added to the NOC and initiated efforts to trademark CCDP nationally. The working group developed and regularly updates “Certification at a Glance”, in which the provincial requirements for certification are outlined and a list of pre-approved programs and training providers, reciprocity and fees are included for each province. This document and the “Benefits of Certification” document (in development) serve to highlight certification similarities and the value of certification. A “Discussion Paper” was developed to consolidate issues and considerations related to reciprocity and harmonization. The group is also working together to draft a reciprocity document, highlighting both process elements that have worked/not worked and including a “template” of key elements for inclusion in a reciprocity agreement.

The capacity of this group to share information and resources and provide mutual support has been invaluable, particularly for provinces seeking to launch associations and/or certification. Currently, four provinces (Alberta, British Columbia, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia) have certification in place and Ontario is in the process of developing certification.

Primer Working Group

Chair: Lynne Bezanson, CCDF

Mandate:How many times have we heard that our language gets in our way! This small, but brave group undertook the challenge and drafted a Primer on Career Development to contribute toward clear terminology and common language for the field. The Primer is also geared to helping practitioners differentiate and explain concepts they know instinctively but have not had clearly defined for practical purposes, including communications with management, policy makers and the public.

Update: The Primer on Career Development was developed and sent to the CCCD membership for review and feedback. You can access the draft Primer at XX. Please review it and send your comments to Lynne at .

Workforce Strategy Working Group

Chair: Trudy Parsons, Millier Dickinson Blais

Mandate: While several Canadian provinces have workforce strategies (or elements thereof), there is no national strategy that directs or guides priority sitting, policy or resource investment. This is done in a disconnected manner. Despite this disconnect many individual groups or networks doing some great work that, collectively, could be leveraged to achieve much greater impacts regionally, provincially and nationally.

There is a general consensus across this group that while Canada would benefit from an overall national strategy, achieving that is beyond the scope of this volunteer working group. With that in mind, the focus has shifted to developing a strategic alignment between career development and workforce development. As a starting point the group plans to examine existing disconnects between career services and the broader workforce development context. This will include exploration of language across the two areas and identifying points of intersection.

The Media Working Group

Chair: Deirdre Pickerell, Life Strategies Ltd.

Mandate:This group seeksto connect with all forms of media to “spread the word” regarding the importance and value of career development/management. The group works to proactively link current news items (e.g. skill shortages, youth unemployment and immigrant unemployment) more directly to our field and to establish themselves as the “go to” source for the media on issues related to career development.

Update: 2014 was a productive year for the Media working group. The group developed a working document titled, Careers, Employment and Jobs: Hot Topics for Reporterswhich will continue to be enhanced. It includes key topics/headlines and, for each, the “hooks” for media and related references. Working Group members are tracking media exposure, both their own and other’s in our field. By doing this, they are building a database of media stories focused on career development themes. The group continues to update their event calendar, highlighting key career development events that could serve as focal points for the media. Media can then be directed to these events and to the experts ready to speak on a range of timely topics. A Tip Sheet was developed to support conference planners and speakers to connect with local, provincial and national media to promote their conferences and profile the field of career development.