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Transcript of Vocational Qualification Project1 Trends in Drafting and upgrading Vocational Qualification...
Vocational Qualification’ Project
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Trends in Drafting and upgrading
Vocational Qualification
Standards in EuropeEuropeaid/120164/D/SV/BG
Magda Kirsch
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Rationale• Globalisation• Increasing international competition• Changes in the demographic development
and in the requirements of the labour market
These are some of the key issues affecting a number of changes concerning the development of standards for VET
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Trends Better articulation with the labour market Closer collaboration with industries Standards but also QF expressed in terms of
learning outcomes Simplification of standards, Integration of evaluation tool in the standard Greater importance of QA Importance of career progression, Importance of student guidance, Link with NQF, credits, greater flexibility, partial
qualifications
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Better articulation with the labour market
Before drafting the standards a number of questions should be asked What are the needs of the labour
market? Can education (formal, non-formal,
informal) meet the needs of the labour market?
Are the graduates from VET prepared for the labour market?
Thus ensuring the employability of VET students.
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Better collaboration with industry/the world of work
In drafting the standards Upgrading the standards Implementing the standards In assessment Certification Quality control
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Drafting the standards
Vitually everywhere a two-step approach In all the countries (Bnl, Bfr, BG, D, UK …)
studied the first step in drafting the standards for VET are the job/professional profiles or job descriptions.
In all countries studied, the sectors are involved in one way or another in drafting these job profiles/descriptions that are the basis for the training profiles or standards.
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Drafting the standards (ctd.)
In drafting the standards When job profiles are translated into
training profiles or training standards (second step) they must be approved not only by the competent authorities but also by the sectors concerned.
Professional bodies in France can determine their own standards for training. These have to be approved by ministerial and sectoral committees.
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Upgrading standards
In upgrading the standards Rapid changes in society and changing
needs of the labour market require new standards or upgrading of standards.
In all the countries (Bnl, Bfr, BG, D, IE, …) studied standards are (only) upgraded at the request of industry
It is also the world of work that will request the development of new standards.
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Implementing standards
In a number of countries specific subjects teachers in VET are being (re)trained in collaboration with industry,
Competence – based and work-based VET models are implemented,
Industry will provide placements as well for teachers as for students,
Industry can provide or share infrastructure with training institutions
Standards developed by industry (e.g. Microsoft) are also implemented in education.
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QA and certification
In Flanders industry is involved in the QA of Professional Bachelor courses through involvement in the SE of the institutions and through on site visits for external evaluation.
In France industry can be responsible for certification (after approval of the Ministries concerned).
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Learning outcomes approach
Trend to define National Qualification frameworks /EQF in terms of learning outcomes/ competences thus they:
Can be used both by education and the labour market
Facilitate APELEnhance transparency
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Learning outcomes approach
Trend to define standards in terms of learning outcomes instead of learning input thus: Enhancing transparency and
comparability of qualifications, Emphasizing competences required at
different qualification levels, Giving the possibility of partial
qualifications/ certifications.
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Integrated assessment tool
• Standards are a tool (criterion) to enable us to assess the effectiveness of the learning. They help us to assess whether the educational aims at a certain level and for a certain profession, training, module or subject have been achieved.
• An evaluation tool will help us to check whether the learners have achieved this standard;
• An evaluation tool will also guarantee that the standard will be implemented and assessed the same way nationwide.
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Simplification of standards
Need for simplification of the standards because of:– The ever more rapid changes on the labour
market, making very detailed standards irrelevant or likely to be outdated very quickly,
– Need for constant updating,– Need to speed up procedures,– Integrated learning outcomes approach,– Growing flexibilisation of learning pathways,– Recognition/Accreditation of Prior
(experiential) Learning (APEL).
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Simplification of standards: How?
– Professional profile or job description is no longer part of the standard – different approaches
• Standard for training is separate from professional profile or sector profile
• Standard is in fact the simplified version of the professional profile,
– Only one standard for training providers and industry, (not everybody agrees)
– Focus on key competences, no longer longs lists of tasks,– Standards linked to professional titles, especially for
adult education focusing mainly on skills;– Standards for partial qualifications/ certifications used as
building blocks towards full qualification.
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Simplification of standards A practical example :
- In Flanders the new decree on the professional title is linked to the development of simplified standards,
- The professional title can be acquired by professionals who have had no formal training,
- Service centres will be established that can valorise and certify the competences of people who have competences but no qualifications for the labour market,
- These competences will be assessed using the new simplified standards.
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Growing importance of QA in VET: A Common QA framework
• Designed by TWG to support the development and, where necessary, the reform of quality systems in VET, in MS.
• Provides a common reference system to improve, monitor and evaluate their own policies and practices in the field of QA.
• Consists of a model based on PDCA quality cycle, a method (mainly self-evaluation), a monitoring system combined with peer review and a measurement tool.
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Common QualityAssurance Framework (CQAF)• Assessment and review
– Self-assessment, combined with periodic external monitoring by an independent and appropriate third party body, considered as a relevant method/tool to assess and evaluate quality, and to ensure and develop quality at system and provider levels.
– The TWG has devised sample self-assessment guidelines for both levels, as a European guide.
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Trends in QA in VET
• Self-assessment– A number of countries such has Ireland,
Romania, Italy, Denmark, Sweden, Flanders, the UK etc. have introduced self-assessment.
– In certain countries like Denmark the focus is entirely on self-assessment and there is hardly any external assessment or audit in place. Probably due to the important involvement of Social partners in the VET system and on a ‘mutual trust’ consensus.
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Trends in QA in VET
• Self-assessment– Flanders: secondary education
• Self assessment linked to audits once every six years. Focus on local autonomy,equal opportunities and transparency.
– Flanders: college-sector (professional Bachelor)• Annual self-assessment of providers linked to
external audit once every 8 years. (the results of the latter are linked to accreditation)
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Implications of these trends
• Modularisation and flexibilisation of VET (as is already the case in some VET schools in Bulgaria – PHARE-project),
• Use of ECVET credits,• New methodologies in education such
as project-based learning, work-based learning etc.
• New assessment methodologies, adapted to these new didactical approaches
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References– 'Copenhagen Process‘, Quality Assurance in
VET, Technical Working Group Progress Report, December 2004
– http://www.oph.fi/info/qa/vet/auditory/Oliveira%20Reis%2010.2.05,%20Opening%20Ceremony%20Copenhagen%20process%20and%20European%20co-operation.pdf,
– Lise-Lotte Ravnmark, ‘An European Guide on Self-assessment for VET providers’, September 2003.
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