Reluctant Suffragettes: When Women Questioned Their Right to Vote

An 86-year-old polling analysis sheds light on why female Americans were slow to appreciate the fruits of the suffragettes’ hard-fought 70-year battle for access to the ballot box.

The post Reluctant Suffragettes: When Women Questioned Their Right to Vote appeared first on Pew Research Center.

Few in Pakistan Support Extremists — But Few Favor Military Confrontation

Extremist groups are increasingly demonstrating their ability to strike throughout a country in which support for al Qaeda or the Taliban has declined sharply in recent years and where very few agree with their widely noted tactic of preventing education for girls.

The post Few in Pakistan Support Extremists — But Few Favor Military Confrontation appeared first on Pew Research Center.

LinkedIn to expand access to professional certifications from Meta, Oracle and more

LinkedIn will soon feature a wider variety of tech skills courses and certifications from major tech companies including IBM, Meta and Oracle on its platform, to better cater to the rising demand for skills-based tech jobs.

The company today announced that people who want to increase their professional skills in order to potentially gain jobs at these companies and other major tech companies can take a wider range of courses via Linkedin Learning, and will receive a certificate on completion.

“A skills-first labor market is emerging all around us,” Hari Srinivasan, vp of product for LinkedIn Talent Solutions, told WorkLife. “Helping our members demonstrate their existing skills, and learn new ones, is a priority – both for keeping skills relevant as jobs evolve and shaping the next step of their careers.”

The number of people on LinkedIn who have added certifications to their profile has increased 44% over the last two years, according to the platform.

People can already access nearly 20,000 courses taught by professionals for a fee of $39.99 a month via Linkedin Learning. The tool has given folks the opportunity to earn academic credit toward a degree, continue education units to maintain certain professional licenses, and certification preparation programs to demonstrate skills in a certain industry. However, currently, there are only three Meta courses and five Oracle courses available. From today there will be a far greater range or certified courses on LinkedIn Learning for people to people to take via the platform, for no additional fee.

Course content will include everything from cloud infrastructure to project management and digital marketing. 

While taking one of the courses on LinkedIn Learning won’t necessarily guarantee a job, Srinivasan said an increasing number of companies are using skills data to fill roles.

“Employers, eager to fill roles in an uncertain labor market, have begun to focus on whether people have the skills to get the job done,” said Srinivasan. Meanwhile 40% of companies on LinkedIn use skills data to fill their roles, up 30% year over year. he added. “This signifies an increasing understanding between organizations that what matters most is that a candidate has the skills, not how they got them.”

LinkedIn Learning’s 2022 Workplace Learning Report found that between upskilling and reskilling and digital skilling/digital transformation, 72% of learning and development leaders see skills as a top focus area this year.

Srinivasan said that with certifications only rising in importance on the platform, LinkedIn is building toward a future where it is the central destination for members to do certification preparation, take assessments, and demonstrate skill proficiency to their network and recruiters.

Oracle’s training specifically will include product demonstrations, best practices, hands-on labs (interactive lab environments), and exam preparation questions, all taught by Oracle experts in an effort to ensure the content keeps pace with the innovation of Oracle Cloud technology.

The incentive for the tech companies that have partnered with LinkedIn, is the added visibility for their courses on the professional network, which claims more than 850 million members.

“With this partnership, millions of people will discover Oracle Cloud certifications and enhance their cloud skills with role-based learning paths,” said Damien Carey, senior vp of Oracle University in a news release about the feature expansion. “We’re excited about the continued collaboration with LinkedIn to empower more learners with expert-led digital training.”

The announcement follows LinkedIn’s acquisition of EduBrite, a platform that specializes in creating and hosting professional certifications and assessments, at the end of June.

LinkedIn has introduced several features this year, that help members spotlight their skills-based training. In May it gave members the ability to associate the skills listed on their profile with the education, jobs or certifications they’ve earned. It also made it possible for recruiters to search and filter candidates based on skill requirements via its tool Linkedin Recruiter.

Srinivasan said that in the last year, 338 million skills were added to LinkedIn profiles, which is a 39% year-over-year increase.

The announcement also comes at a time when Young people are more carefully considering apprenticeships over college where they can complete a course that is cheaper, shorter and more flexible and still have the opportunity to land their dream job.

Microsoft, LinkedIn partnership continues

With Tuesday’s announcement also comes the news of an extension of LinkedIn’s two-year partnership with Microsoft that will now offer certificates aimed at helping workers and job-seekers transition into the digital economy with Microsoft’s Skills for Jobs program, which is free for all learners.

Over the past two years LinkedIn and Microsoft have worked on a global skills initiative partnership to help people develop skills that are in demand by companies through free access to curated content which identified as having the greatest number of job openings, have had steady growth and pay a livable wage. It empowered more than 400,000 companies to make a skills-based hire last year. 

“While we know it will take time to create a skills-first labor market, we are committed to expanding our partnerships, innovating our product, and collaborating with other organizations to create more equal access to opportunity through skills,” read LinkedIn’s news release.

The post LinkedIn to expand access to professional certifications from Meta, Oracle and more appeared first on Digiday.

Brave Commerce Podcast: How Leveraging Collaboration Can Help Brands Capture New Audiences

On this week’s episode of Brave Commerce, Mark Edmonson, chief marketing officer of Materne North America, joins hosts Rachel Tipograph and Sarah Hofstetter to discuss diverse representation. He talks about his experience as a marketer and how he came to his current position with Marterne. Edmonson speaks on the importance of DEI and being represented…

Samsung TV Plus Platform Doubles Down on FAST in Rebrand

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Discord: How to Leave a Server on Desktop

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‘The Bear’ Cooks Up A Feast Of Tasty Television

In a television/video world where there are more original scripted series than ever before, it is rare to find a new show that is truly original and immediately rises to the top of the heap. I came to
“The Bear” knowing virtually nothing about it aside from a friend’s recommendation that it was “really good.” She didn’t want provide any details, because she thought I might not want to watch it if
she did. And she’s probably right. In this week’s edition I share my one recommendations on why it is indeed really good.

The Speed of Culture: Content to Commerce

In an era of technological advancement, with various devices at our disposal, who still wears a watch? Lots of people, as it turns out. As a multi-billion dollar industry, watches are always on-trend and sales grow every year. To understand the business and its future, Ben joins the conversation to share insights about the watch…