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Can Your Digital Technology Skills Compete in Today’s Remote Work Environment?

by Kathy Krause, M.Ed., Coordinator of Experiential Learning Jun 12, 2020
With a world that has now gone virtual, do you feel you can keep up with the changing new technological environment that we find ourselves in? Employers are now looking for interns and new hires that can effectively leverage digital technology.

With a world that has now gone virtual, do you feel you can keep up with the changing new technological environment that we find ourselves in? Employers are now looking for interns and new hires that can effectively leverage digital technology. Many companies are now requiring a Digital Technology Skill Assessment Test (DT-SAT). This skill set goes far beyond texting, Skyping, and spreadsheets. You must be able to create relevant, original material, communicate orally or in written form, and be able to virtually persuade and influence.

Five areas of digital capability have been identified by the Tech Partnership in London. Two key factors, safety and security, are incredibly important and run across all 5 categories.

1. Managing Information - Find, manage and store digital information and content

Can you find and assess accurate information, store data on clouds or a variety of drives, or use simple analytics to manage information?

2. Communicating - Communicate, interact, collaborate, share and connect with others

Are you able to email, instant message, video chat and work across all forms of social media fluently?  Can you use all of the above skills for client relations?

3. Transacting - Purchase and sell, organize finances; use digital government services

Do you know how to securely protect your personal data, work in universal applications, effectively interpret government regulations within the field, plus understand the marketplace selling online?

4. Problem Solving - Solve problems using digital tools within safe parameters

Are you able to use digital tools accurately, sourcing support while avoiding scams and malicious ware? Can you learn tasks online through video and use those newly developed skills to solve problems while instructing others?  Are you an effective video/webinar attendee who understands basic data-analytics?

5. Creating - Engage with communities and create basic digital content

Do you know and utilize copyright, privacy, social media, feedback guidelines?  Can you create texts, documents, PDFs, albums, surveys effectively? Can you teach others or create tutorials so others meet the same standards?

Technology is integrated and weaved through almost every industry.  By developing your technology skills now, you will be more adaptable and ready for the future. For tips to upgrade your skill, follow this link:  https://www.thetechpartnership.com/basic-digital-skills/basic-digital-skills-framework/ .

 

Kathy Krause, M.Ed., Coordinator of Experiential Learning, Career Development Center

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