So the long-awaited (and long worked on) policy brief is available.  It took awhile to get acquainted with the literature, analyze the data, and develop some preliminary conclusions and arguments about the whole thing.  The policy brief is available here at the WISCAPE website.
Since the editing process ended up slicing much of the original text, I've also published the brief in its longer form as a WI Center for Education Research Working Paper.  The abstract is below and the full paper is at the WCER website.
ABSTRACT: Wisconsin and the nation are struggling with how to address persistent unemployment and an
  economy recovering too slowly from the Great Recession of 2008. While economists point to a
  host of reasons for sluggish growth, including low aggregate demand, outsourcing, spending
  cuts, and so on, some argue a principal culprit is the "skills gap." Based in part on this
  interpretation of the causes of slow economic growth, the policy response at national and state
  levels is increasingly focusing on the educational sector as a way to cultivate more skilled
  workers. Yet important questions about the nature of employer expectations and the subsequent
  implications for the nature of educational programming and curricula remain unanswered. In
  particular, notwithstanding the ongoing debate about whether a skills gap exists at all, empirical
  evidence does not support the assumption that employers' primary need is technical training of
  potential workers. In this working paper I analyze Wisconsin's education and workforce
  development policies in light of the research literature on the topic, along with data from a
  survey of 181 Wisconsin-based employers who were asked about the types of skills they found
  lacking among job applicants in manufacturing. The results indicate that employers are seeking
  new hires in a variety of job categories such as skilled labor, engineers, and welders, each of
  which have distinct requirements for training and skill sets. Employers report that work ethic is
  the most important skill or applicant attribute lacking in the labor market, followed by technical
  skills, math skills, and social skills. These results highlight the fact that employers seek such a
  variety of skill types that a sole focus on technical or vocational training will not provide
  students with the types of skills that will make them competitive in the job market. The evidence
  also suggests that the effects of current policies that tend to remain silent on non-technical skill
  development could be enhanced by adopting a more comprehensive notion of skills, as well as
  creating programs and curricula that cultivate these multi-faceted skills in 2- and 4-year college
  and university classrooms.
 
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