APPLIED ACADEMICS AND WORKPLACE SKILLS
The following Applied Academic Skills general statements were developed in cooperation with
the Vocational-Technical Education Consortium of States (V-TECS). The process involved
using the NATEF task list and the Basic/Essential Skills Taxonomy developed at Arizona State
University by Dr. Lester Snyder.
Committee meetings were held in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. At each
of the meetings, ASE Certified Collision Repair & Refinish technicians were used as experts in
the automotive service industry. V-TECS used experts in three academic areas (language arts,
mathematics, and science) to help the committees understand the specific definitions of the
concepts used in the taxonomy.
The committees were asked to identify the academic skills required to perform each task listed in
the five collision repair & refinish areas. Their responses were recorded using the
Basic/Essential Skills Taxonomy codes and were put into a database. After all the meetings were
completed, a composite or unduplicated list of the codes was generated for language arts,
mathematics, and science. Specific statements related to the use of the academic skill in the
automotive industry were then written. A matrix was built to show the relationship between the
composite list and each of the five collision repair & refinish areas. The general statements
included in this manual were developed from the specific statements. Several crosschecks and
reviews were conducted to ensure the accuracy of the statement and the relationship to the
NATEF task list.
The Workplace Skills List was generated by having the committees identify the workplace skills
from the V-TECS/ILLINOIS WORKPLACE SKILLS LIST that are important for employment
as a collision repair & refinish technician.
** Please contact the NATEF office to order the Applied Academics and Workplace Skills for
Collision Repair & Refinish Technicians book. This book includes the unduplicated list of
applied academic skills in all areas, complete with statements of their use by collision repair &
refinish technicians; the matrix; the definitions of the Basic/Essential Skills codes; the general
statements; the Workplace Skills List; and the NATEF Task List.
The information in the book will provide a common vocabulary for instructors and
administrators to use in achieving academic and vocational skill standards. This information can
be used by programs to document the academic skills taught in collision repair & refinish
technical classes. The examples for teaching an academic concept in an applied context will also
be useful for schools when planning, designing, or writing curricula. **

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