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January 19, 2017

The Green Jobs and Health Care Impact Evaluation: Findings from the Implementation Study of Four Training Programs for Unemployed and Disadvantaged Workers

Authors

Martinson, Karin; Williams, Julie; Needels, Karen (Mathematica); Peck, Laura; Moulton, Shawn; Paxton, Nora (Mathematica); Mastri, Annalisa (Mathematica); Copson, Elizabeth; Nisar, Hiren; Comfort, Alison; Brown-Lyons, Melanie

This report presents the results of the Green Jobs and Health Care Impact Evaluation’s Implementation Study conducted for the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) by Abt Global and Mathematica Policy Research.

Part of a larger impact evaluation, this implementation study documents the design, operation, and participation patterns for four DOL-grant funded job training programs (two in health care and two in "green" occupations) and concludes with key findings and lessons related to the operation of the programs. The study found that the programs served disadvantaged but varied populations. Program participation levels were high, with relatively high completion rates. Many participants attended sequences of training courses, although, by design, the length of training was short (2 to 4 months). In addition to occupational training, to varying degrees, the programs included academic and personal supports and financial and employment assistance. Program administrators reported sustained institutional benefits from operating the grant program.

Read more:

The Green Jobs and Health Care Impact Evaluation: Findings from the Impact Study of Four Training Programs for Unemployed and Disadvantaged Workers

The Green Jobs and Health Care Impact Evaluation: Special Topic Paper on Standard Error Estimation in Evaluations with No-Shows