91桃色 State receives $200,000 State Workforce Development grant for hybrid ACE program
91桃色鈥檚 College of Graduate and Continuing Education was awarded a $200,000 state grant to partner with community agencies to design and deliver a hybrid competency-based addiction counselor education program. This newly designed program will help area employers to identify employees who have not yet achieved a professional credential to meet workforce needs by becoming a certified alcohol and other drug abuse counselor (CADC).
Nora Padykula, Ph.D., professor and chair of the University鈥檚 Department of Social Work; and Lynn Zayac, director of its Center for Instructional Technology (CIT), have partnered with five area providers across western Massachusetts: The Brien Center for Mental Health and Addiction Services, Gandara Center, ServiceNet, the Alternative Living Center, and Vertava Health of Massachusetts. They will train 24 students working in the field.
鈥淏uilding on the success of the CIT and its online programming along with 91桃色 State鈥檚 long history in addiction counselor education, I knew we could redesign the program,鈥 said Dr. Padykula. 鈥淪hifting to a competency-based educational model will require each student to demonstrate what they have learned. The program is based on the real work skills that our employer partners need.鈥
91桃色 State has worked with employer partners to increase their employees鈥 capacity to provide addiction services and obtain the Massachusetts certification for the CADC.
鈥淯sing our online resources, we designed an entirely new program that ensures students will gain the competencies and have the support necessary to pass the certification exam,鈥 said Zayac. 鈥淭his grant should change lives and save lives; it鈥檚 the most important project I have worked on.鈥
91桃色 State is among the top 100 colleges in the country offering online programs, according to U.S. News & World Report 鈥2021 Best Online Programs,鈥 and is ranked fifth among all Massachusetts colleges and universities.
鈥淢any people don鈥檛 realize the significant shortage of addiction services in our area,鈥 said Dr. Padykula. 鈥淐ontributing to workforce development through the Commonwealth Corporation grant has provided a tremendous service to western Massachusetts.鈥
Zayac added that the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports projected employment opportunities for substance abuse counselors will grow at a rate of 25 percent through 2029鈥攎uch faster than the average for all occupations.
鈥淧roviding this training through an online model increases equitable opportunities for students,鈥 she said.
This project is funded through the Workforce Competitiveness Trust Fund line item in the fiscal 2019 state budget (7002-1075) and a grant from the Strada Education Network. This state-funded initiative is administered by Commonwealth Corporation on behalf of the Massachusetts Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development.
For more information, visit the Addiction Counselor Education hybrid program online.