- Hourly / - BiWeekly /
- Monthly / $57,275.00-$92,108.00 Yearly
SKILLED
SERVICE BARGAINING UNIT: S
A Work Adjustment Supervisor is the
supervisory level of work at Maryland Department of Health (MDH) designated
Court Involved (CI) Facilities in the development, implementation, and
monitoring of work placement, work training, and work adjustment programs for
mentally ill patients or developmentally disabled clients within a
pre-vocational development program at a residential or inpatient facility or
community- based program. Employees in this classification have supervisory
responsibility for lower-level Work Adjustment Coordinators, Work Adjustment
Associates and instructional personnel.
Employees in this classification
receive general direction from a Work Adjustment Manager or other program
administrator. Employees may be required to work weekends and holidays
and may be subject to call-in and overtime. Employees may be required to
operate industrial equipment which would require the use of protective
equipment, such as goggles, gloves or safety glasses. Employees are
required to observe infection control precautions in order to prevent
contamination and spread of disease. Employees may be required to
physically restrain patients/clients displaying violent and aggressive
behavior. The work may require the lifting and positioning of
non-ambulatory patients/clients and the lifting of wheelchairs and other heavy
equipment. The work may require long periods of standing, walking,
bending and reaching.
Positions in this classification are
evaluated by using the classification job evaluation methodology. The use
of this method involves comparing the assigned duties and responsibilities of a
position to the job criteria found in the Nature of Work and Examples of Work
sections of the class specification.
The Work Adjustment Supervisor is
differentiated from the Work Adjustment Coordinator in that the Work Adjustment
Supervisor has supervisory responsibility for lower-level Work Adjustment
Associates, Work Adjustment Coordinators and instructional staff while the Work
Adjustment Coordinator is responsible for developing, implementing and
monitoring work placement, work training and work adjustment programs under
general supervision. The Work Adjustment Supervisor is differentiated
from the Work Adjustment Manager in that the Work Adjustment Manager has
administrative responsibility for a large work adjustment program and
supervisory responsibility for Work Adjustment Supervisors.
Supervises Work Adjustment
Coordinators, Work Adjustment Associates and other lower-level work
adjustment staff;
Develops work schedules and assigns
work;
Develops training programs for
subordinate staff; Interviews and hires new employees;
Develops and implements appropriate
industrial or instructional pre-vocational training methods and materials to
meet the program needs identified for each patient/client;
Conducts on-site inspections of
workshops and work training areas in order to assess the instructional value
and industrial productivity of the individual pre-vocational programs being
carried out;
Develops, maintains and evaluates the
screening tools and procedures used for assessing patients/clients for
pre-vocational adjustment and development programs;
Assists and is charged with
responsibility for patients/clients performing tasks in a specific
pre-vocational work setting, such as horticulture, woodworking, housekeeping,
sheltered workshop, linen services to ensure that activities are consistent
with the individual treatment plan and that production standards are met;
Assesses the pre-vocational
capabilities and limitations of patients/clients in order to determine their
interests, aptitudes, abilities and work histories through review of records
and personal interviews;
Places the patient/client in the
appropriate work setting within an existing program in accordance with the
patient/client assessment, the Individual Treatment Plan and pre-vocational
program guidelines;
Reviews the level and type of work
performed by the patient/client in conjunction with established wage and hour
regulations in order to determine the appropriate rate of compensation;
Reviews workshop contracts to ensure
that work performed is consistent with the terms defined in the contract;
Motivates patients/clients to achieve
their optimum level of pre-vocational development through established means,
such as group activity and the accomplishment of individual goals;
Documents the progress of
patients/clients in accordance with established procedures in a clear and
comprehensive manner;
Adapts programs to respond to the
functional level of patients/clients;
Performs other related duties.
Knowledge of physical and mental
disabilities and their effects on the patients’/clients’ ability to perform
work related functions;
Knowledge of various work adjustment
methods;
Knowledge about related occupations;
Knowledge of wage and hour
regulations;
Knowledge of symptoms and behavioral
problems associated with physical or mental illness or developmental
disabilities;
Knowledge of the methods of
documenting patient/client progress;
Knowledge of behavior modification
techniques;
Knowledge of therapeutic techniques in
patient/client interaction;
Skill in teaching simple manual tasks
and functions;
Skill in observing patients’/clients’
progress;
Skill in assessing various levels of
patient/client behavior, aptitude and performance;
Skill in motivating patients/clients
in a work setting;
Skill in computing rates of
compensation in accordance with wage and hour regulations;
Skill in preparing reports regarding
patients’/clients’ progress;
Ability to supervise employees;
Ability to learn a specific vocational
function of limited complexity;
Ability to work as an effective member
of a team of health care providers.
Experience: Six years of experience
providing work placement, work training, and work adjustment services to
mentally ill patients or developmentally disabled clients in a pre-vocational
development program. One year of the experience must have included
responsibility for program development and implementation.
Notes:
1. Candidates may substitute the
possession of a Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university with
a major in health services, human services, education or the behavioral
sciences and two years of experience providing work placement, work training,
and work adjustment services to mentally ill patients or developmentally
disabled clients in a pre-vocational development program (one year of the
experience must have included responsibility for program development and
implementation) for the required experience.
2. Candidates may substitute U.S.
Armed Forces military service experience as a non-commissioned officer in
Career Counseling and Advisor classifications or Career Counseling and
Advisor specialty codes in the Counseling field of work on a year-for-year
basis for the required experience.
1. Employees in this classification
may be assigned duties which require the operation of a motor vehicle.
Employees assigned such duties will be required to possess a motor vehicle
operator’s license valid in the State of Maryland.
2. Employees in some positions in this
classification may be required to operate vehicles which require a Class C
motor vehicle operator’s license valid in the State of Maryland.
Employees assigned such duties will be required to possess the Class C motor
vehicle operator’s license.
3. Employees in this
classification may be required to successfully complete training and maintain
current certification in cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Employees in this
classification may be subject to call-in and, therefore, may be required to
provide the facility with a phone number where they can be reached.
Class specifications are broad
descriptions covering groups of positions used by various State departments and
agencies. Position descriptions maintained by the using department or agency
specifically address the essential job functions of each position.
This is a Skilled Service
classification in the State Personnel Management System. All positions in
this classification are Skilled Service positions. Some positions in
Skilled Service classifications may be designated Special Appointment in accordance
with the State Personnel and Pensions Article, Section 6-405, Annotated Code of
Maryland.
This classification is not assigned to
a bargaining unit, as indicated by the designation of S (Supervisor), M
(Manager), T (Agency Head), U (Board or Commission Member), W (Student), X
(Used by Agency or Excluded by Executive Order), or Z (Confidential). As
provided by State Personnel and Pensions Article, Section 3-102, special
appointment, temporary, contractual, supervisory, managerial and
confidential employees are excluded collective bargaining.
Additionally, certain executive branch agencies are exempt from collective
bargaining and all positions in those agencies are excluded from
collective bargaining.
7/1/2021