Wave of the Future has already hit the Coast

Jump into the technology where it exists, no need to create more

Let's pretend for a minute that you are back in high school. You are excited about your interview today for your summer job. You clean up your act a little and go to the employer's place of business. The manager greets you and tells you to make yourself at home in an office in the back. The office is equipped with just a desk, a chair and a computer. A voice from the computer says "Hello, come on in."
Without warning, your interview has changed from a perceived one with a person at the office, to a real one with a video camera. This has already happened at the coast, and it will happen more as the technology catches on.
Mary Merrill, the director of the cooperative work experience program with Clatsop Community College, has worked hard to ensure that our area students can take this kind of interview, called a "Virtual Interview," in stride.
Mary and Cynthi Risan, former North Coast Eduction Consortium representative, obtained $1,500 from a Workforce Quality Committee, School to Work Grant to purchase over a dozen video cameras and computer software. With the help of on-site volunteers at each location, the equipment is now installed at Clatsop Community College, Tongue Point Job Corps, the Community Information Center in Astoria and the high schools in Jewell, Knappa, Astoria, Warrenton, Seaside and Tillamook. The hub for the system is the Columbia Technology Center in St. Helens.
Last month, the first students at Tongue Point Job Corps got to use the technology, consisting of a video camera mounted atop each computer monitor and some installed software, for their first crack at the system. With the help of vocational accounting instructor, Greg Simons student Dameon Kirchhefer was required to provide a resume and a complete job description for an actual employment opportunity. Mary Merrill then researched Dameon's selected company/target job as a desktop technician for a Portland-based Fortune 500 company and then posed as the interviewer. She asked questions of Dameon that he might hear as part of a real interview, and observed his performance.
While video or virtual interviews will never take the place of a face-to-face encounter, one aspect of this technology is head and shoulders above the next choice, which might be a telephone interview. With a virtual interview, not only does the interviewer get to observe the appearance and body language of the applicant, they may also subject the applicant to some real-life problems via software. If Mary wanted to confirm Dameon's ability to read or update a spreadsheet on his company's performance, she needs only to click on the "sharing"option of her computer software to enable Dameon to utilize the software and spreadsheet to demonstrate his talents. Another use for the sharing portion of the software would be in brainstorming sessions for creative input to a larger company's marketing plan. This software enables art directors in one location to make changes to artwork on the spot, while observing the facial expressions and reactions of her audience on the other end of the video system: No longer is there a need to revise comprehensive artwork and mail out samples prior to developing art boards for printing. As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words.
Other uses for the technology, just keeping within our Job Corps example above, are to provide the students with school-to-work experience for college credits, to enable the Job Corps students to participate in an annual business competition coordinated with area high schools called "Business Leaders of Tomorrow" (See related story on page 10.), to correspond with other Job Corps students from around the nation and work on coop projects, to enable students and Job Corps placement officers at the center where the student is enrolled to communicate visually with regional placement officers where the student will go after leaving Tongue Point, and to enable students to have actual interviews with real potential employers, rather than the current system of an instructor/staffer having to drive a student to each interview.
Business professionals may get involved with the program in a number of ways: You may volunteer to pose as a potential employer, giving the students good practice, and you may access the equipment to conduct long-distance interviews of your own, to name just two. As stated by Mary Merrill, "There is no need to reinvent the wheel. We have the technology already in place. They should access the technology where it is located already." LCB

Clatsop Community College
Contact: Mary Merrill, director of cooperative work experience
Address: 1653 Jerome Avenue
Astoria, Oregon 97103
Telephone: 503/325-0910-
Fax: 503/325-5738
e-mail: mmerrill@clatsop.cc.or.us
Hours: By Appointment

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