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State of the Woodwork Career Alliance: Still Growing Strong

SkillsUSA National Cabinetmaking competition

WCA will continue its partnership with SkillsUSA, including state and national cabinetmaking competitions. (Photo by Kristine Cox, Rowland Woodworking)

LINCOLN, Neb. – The Woodwork Career Alliance of North America (WCA) continues to increase industry awareness and participation, while also developing new programs to help train the next generation of woodworkers. Woodwork career alliance passport credential

WCA issued a record-shattering 1,358 credentials in 2023, nearly 40% more than the number it awarded in 2022 (980) and double the 2021 total (686). The vast majority of the credentials were Sawblade and Core issued to high school and postsecondary woodworking students. A small, but growing number of Green, Blue and other credentialing levels were issued to woodworking professionals.

To earn a credential, the candidate must successfully be evaluated and tested on a variety of woodworking skills. The Sawblade Certificate, for example, covers layout and measurement, plus set-up and operation of a jointer, table saw, portable hand sander and drill press.

The skill achievements and credentials are recorded in the individual’s Passport. WCA registered 1,391 Passports in 2023, down slightly from 2022 (1,423) but more than double that of 2021 (686). To date, the WCA has enrolled more than 6,000 Passport holders, nearly half of them in the last two years.

“The record number of WCA credentials in 2023 isn’t just a statistic; it’s a seismic shift in our industry,” said Scott Nelson, president of the WCA. “Each credential signifies not just technical achievement, but a dedication to quality and safety. For employers, it’s the golden ticket to a reliable workforce. For individuals, it’s a passport to career advancement, increased wages, and a sense of pride in their craftsmanship. This milestone isn’t just about numbers; it’s about building a brighter future for woodworking, one credential at a time.”

2023 also saw the WCA record modest gains in the number of participating woodworking educators, wood products manufacturers, and sponsors.

“We now have more than 140 EDUcation members and more than three dozen MANufacturing members,” Nelson said. “In addition, we ended 2023 with 28 Gold and 22 Silver sponsors. Twenty-eight of those sponsors have helped fund WCA programs for the last three years or more.”

More 2023-24 Highlights
WCA concluded 2023 by initiating the development of online training modules that wood products companies will be able to use to supplement their in-house training programs. The online training courses, to debut early this year, are part of the WCA’s new emphasis to grow its MANufacturing membership base by offering new benefits to wood products manufacturers.

The WCA entered into a partnership with the National Woods Board (NWB), a new non-profit organization is developing a scalable curriculum to teach students woodworking skills that will make them workforce ready. The NWB’s education programs that incorporates the WCA Skill Standards and Passport credentialing system to teach students woodworking skills that will make them workforce ready.

WCA EDUcation members

More than 140 high school and postsecondary woodworking programs are EDUcation members of the WCA.

Representatives of the WCA presented a well-attended half-day workforce development workshop at the AWFS Fair focused on helping woodworking companies establish or enhance in-house training programs. The WCA will conduct a similar workshop at the International Woodworking Fair this August.

WCA continued its involvement with the SkillsUSA Cabinetmaking competition on both national and state levels. The annual contest brings state SkillsUSA student champs from around the country together for the ultimate showdown.

WCA celebrated the awarding of its second Diamond credential ever to Lizzy Conley, new director of Madison College’s Cabinetmaking & Millwork program.

Finally, WCA continued to expand its industry out-reach through news releases and the quarterly Pathways newsletter. A new-look Pathways will debut in February.

The WCA’s new programs and industry promotions are made possible by its sponsors. They include:

Gold Sponsors
AWI QCP • Blum • Brown Wood Products • Cantek • Daniels-Olsen • Diamond Vogel • Eagle Woodworking • Franklin Intl • Friulmac USA • KCD Software • Kerfkore • Newman Machine • NBMDA • PantoRouter • Rev-A-Shelf • Richelieu • Roseburg • SawStop • SCM Group USA • Shaper Tools • ShopBot Tools • Smartech • Stiles Machinery • Thermwood • Titebond •Wood-Ed Table by Mimbis • Woodworking Network • Wurth Group

Silver Sponsors
Aiken Controls • Air Handling Systems • Black Bros. • Brookhuis America •
C.R. Onsrud • Castle USA • Colonial Saw • Daubert Chemical • Deerwood Fasteners • Dynabrade • Eagle Mouldings • GDP Guhdo • Gemini-Coatings • Hafele America • IMA-Schelling • Leitz Tooling • Lockdowel • Microvellum Software • PaintLine • Sorrelli Woodwork Consultants • Super Thin Saws • Weima America

Learn more about WCA membership and sponsorship opportunities.

Scott Nelson president Woodwork Career Alliance of North America

President’s Message: Thank You Sponsors for Helping Us Make This a Record Year

As the end of the year is quickly approaching, I just want to thank all of the INDustry sponsors and partners for their continued support of WCA. Without their backing we would not be able to offer our future workforce updated education programs and credentialing services. Please try and support those businesses whenever possible.

2023 will go down as WCA’s best year ever! Through November, we enrolled over 1,200 candidates into the Passport program and have issued more than 1,100 credentials. Our retention of high school and postsecondary woodworking programs as EDUcation members and wood products firms as MANufacturing members is maintaining at about 80%.

Hopefully 2024 will see a significant increase of MANufacturing members with the introduction of online employee training modules early next year.

Finally, I’d be remiss not to express my personal thanks to Patrick Molzahn, who will be retiring from Madison College at the end of the year. Patrick was a major mover and shaker for the WCA from the very beginning. His contributions to our cause have been so many and varied. On behalf of the WCA, thank you Patrick and be well!

WCA wishes all an enjoyable Holiday Season and a Prosperous New Year!!!

Sincerely,

Scott Nelson
President
Woodwork Career Alliance of North America
snelsonwca@gmail.com

 

Seymour High School woodworking students

State of the Woodwork Career Alliance

Avery High School students work toward earning their Sawblade certificates.

Q&A with Scott Nelson, president of the WCA.

2020-21 will go down as a time many of us would like to forget but will always remember. It may not have been all bad, but it most certainly was not all good.

Scott Nelson, president of the Woodwork Career Alliance, rolled up his sleeves to field questions about the impact the COVID-19 pandemic has had on the non-profit organization and its core members. He also offered a glimpse of WCA programs and activities moving forward.

I would say that the best thing that came out of this challenging year is that we created a totally online training platform for our accredited skill evaluators. — Scott Nelson

Rich Christianson: How has the WCA managed to keep things together in the face of the unprecedented challenges posed by the pandemic?

Scott Nelson: It’s been an interesting year, to say the least. There was a lot of uncertainty because we didn’t know how severe Covid would get and how long the pandemic would last. I was concerned about what was going to happen for the 2020-21 school year and how many of our EDUcation members might not renew. Fortunately, our renewals were very strong. We even added some new schools giving us a slight net gain for the year.

To get a better handle on how our EDUcation members’ woodworking programs were doing, we conducted a pair of surveys. The first one was done in Spring 2020 right after the pandemic began. Then, we conducted a follow-up survey in the Fall. That second survey was especially revealing. We learned that nearly one-fifth of our member schools were closed, meaning students were being taught woodworking solely online. About 30 percent of the schools were in a hybrid model in which students alternated on different days between taking classes in-person and remote. Even schools that were fully open still had to limit how many students could be in the woodshop.

In preparation for the 2020-21 school year, we beefed up our online resource library exclusively available to our EDUcation and MANufacturing members. I particularly want to thank Patrick Molzahn of Madison College for creating dozens of new machinery videos and also added related lesson plans and instructor notes to the library. Based on the log-in activity, we know that a lot more teachers took advantage of these materials than in past years.

Right now, I’m extremely busy processing and sending out Sawblade Certificates for qualifying students. I was pleasantly surprised by how many of our programs were able to certify students for their Sawblade Certificates especially considering that many of them had limited opportunities to be in the shop. I applaud the teachers and students for rising to the challenge.

Christianson: Have there been any silver linings in this era of Covid?

Nelson: I would say that the best thing that came out of this challenging year is that we created a totally online training platform for our accredited skill evaluators. That has turned out to be very successful. The training can be done at the teachers’ leisure and it has a much more in-depth training component to it with one-on-one sessions between the lead instructor and the teacher.

So far, we’ve certified about 10 of more than instructors enrolled from 13 states for online ASE training. These teachers will be able to evaluate and test their students for their Sawblade Certificates. So, that has great potential to grow that program. All in all, I really feel good about it. I think that those who are getting their certification through the online program are excellent. I feel confident that they will be able to evaluate and register students correctly.

Christianson: That’s great news, but I imagine there’s been some downside. In what area has the WCA most struggled?

Nelson: We had some really good momentum heading into the pandemic. If I had to point to one thing, I’d say Covid slowed us down in the visibility department. Not having a live IWF last summer hurt. We always get a lot of traffic and the industry’s awareness of who we are and what we do always perks up because of the shows. We did do the virtual IWF Connect and AWI convention, but people don’t come looking for what they don’t know about so consequently our traffic was a fraction of what we are used to. Plus, I missed face-to-face conversations. It really hurt not being able to get our message out at shows, especially to our outreach efforts to wood product manufacturers.

Christianson: Sounds like your ready to get back at it in Las Vegas for the AWFS Fair.

Nelson: Absolutely. I’m looking forward to the AWFS Fair. I think everybody is, both on the supply and machine side and the wood manufacturing side. With the vaccine getting widespread usage, I feel it will be a good show. I think everyone who attends will do so with a purpose and I’m sure there will be a lot of new products to see since the 2019 AWFS Fair.

I’m excited about talking to people about what’s new with the WCA, including the online ASE training. Bruce Spitz (a WCA board member) and I will conduct a workforce development workshop. The program is geared toward helping companies pull together some of the essentials for starting or improving their own training program. Our goal is to help attendees develop a training template unique to their business to take back to their shops to flush out and implement.

We’re also partnering with Mimbus again. They’re bringing the SimSpray virtual reality device for training spray finishing. It’s a great magnet for drawing people into our booth.

Christianson: Now that we appear to be coming out of the pandemic are you seeing a surge of activity?

Nelson: I would say so. I’m definitely seeing a surge of teachers certifying students for their Sawblade Certificates who were unable to do so last year. Because their students were not in class, they couldn’t do the machinery evaluations.

We are also seeing some schools signing up in April, which is not totally unusual but is still a good sign that they are getting back in business and plan to be even more operational in the fall. I think we’re signing on new schools not only to utilize the WCA’s resources but also because the pendulum is swinging back toward the trades. More people are finding out that there are good career opportunities that you can get without going tremendously in debt at a four-year college. Consequently, more high school and postsecondary schools with woodworking programs are seeing the need to offer national certification based on the industry’s best practices and needs.

Richard Memory, left, and Chuck Buck pose with Memory’s Gold credential project.

Christianson: You’ve made several references to growth in school woodworking program membership, what about industry participation?

Nelson: Thanks in large part to financial support from our Gold and Silver sponsors, I think we’ve made good progress in making more wood product manufacturers aware of us through our press releases, plus participation at industry events and word of mouth. We’re adding new manufacturing members, but we have a long way to go. The reality is that we’re a small, non-profit organization with limited funds and really count on the work of dedicated volunteers to make things happen. We have a lot of ideas for new programs but have to stay focused and make priorities. The new online ASE training is a perfect example of that.

I’d love to see more companies step up to the plate like Jefferson Millwork has. They recently helped Richard Memory, one of their employees, be awarded the industry’s first WCA Gold credential. Jefferson has taken the initiative and demonstrated how a company can create a career path and opportunities for an employee to move up the ladder by tying training and incentives to motivate that person to learn and grow their skills.

We’re always looking for new ways to become more relevant to wood manufacturers. That’s why I’m excited that we’re partnering with Woodworking Network on a new workforce development survey. We all know that finding and keeping good employees is an immense challenge for the woodworking industry. We’re hoping the survey will help us identify some potential solutions and provide us guidance for developing new programs.

Christianson: Anything you would like to add?

Nelson: I’m just really looking forward to putting Covid in the rearview mirror and getting back to a little more normalcy.

 

Welcome New Members & Renewing Sponsors

The Woodwork Career Alliance of North America is pleased to welcome four new EDUcation™ member schools, one new MANufacturing™ members  and five new INDustry™ Sponsors. We also welcome back two sponsors for a second year.

Thank you for your membership and support!

EDUcation™ Members
Beloit Memorial High School, Beloit, WI
Crosby-Ironton High School, Crosby, MN
Hillcrest High School, Midvale, UT
Kettle Moraine High School, Wales, WI

Find a WCA EDUcation™ woodworking program in your area.

MANufacturing™ Members
Advanced Fixtures Inc., Farmersville, TX

New INDustry™ Gold Sponsors
Lutz Woodworks,
Wylie, TX
Hafele America, Archdale, NC
Newman Machine,
Browns Summit, NC
SawStop,
Tualatin, OR
ShopBot Tools,
Durham, NC

INDustry™ Gold Sponsor Renewals
WoodEd Table by Mimbus, Chicago, IL 

INDustry™ Silver Sponsor Renewals
Aiken Controls,
Lenoir, NC

View all WCA INDustry™ Sponsors & Supporters