1 / 22

Impulse for the VET column

Flexibility as connecting concept ECER Hamburg September 2003 Wil van Esch CINOP Policy Research The Netherlands. Impulse for the VET column. Industrial Standard programs Distinction head-hands Knowledge and skills more or less closed Education and training in one institution

berny
Download Presentation

Impulse for the VET column

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Flexibility as connecting concept ECER Hamburg September 2003 Wil van Esch CINOP Policy Research The Netherlands Impulse for the VET column

  2. Industrial Standard programs Distinction head-hands Knowledge and skills more or less closed Education and training in one institution Differences between students deviation of the standard Vertical hierarchy Knowledge Individual learning trajectories Head-hands-heart integrated by competences Knowledge and skills stream Open learning environments Differences are the starting point Horizontal organisation On the way to the knowledge society

  3. Needed changes in present VET-system • Opening of a second royal route to higher education • Removal of partitions between the parts of VET (prevocational-secondary vocational-higher vocational) • Activation of hidden and wasted talent • Raising responsivity • Raising attractiveness VET through career building • Strengthening tailor-made trainings • Raising external orientation of educational institutions • Raising professionality

  4. Impulse regulation • Aim: realisation qualification profit • Two tracks: innovation of contents and institutions • Regulations for 2000 en 2001, continuation for 2002-2005 • Distribution prevocational-secondary vocational-higher vocational 3:2:1 • For 2002-2005 2 monitors: qualitative and quantitative

  5. Themes education institutions • Career orientation and guidance • Programmatic connection • VET-specific pedagogy and didactic • Knowledge infrastructure

  6. Themes Lead bodies • Improving connection qualification structure secondary vocational education with prevocational and higher VET • Strengthening the quality of work-based learning • Development of a competence-based qualification structure

  7. Definition of flexibility • All activities meant to optimalize the adjusting and specification to characteristics and needs of students and clients of prevocational, secondary vocational and higher vocational education and training

  8. Figure: The wheel of flexibility Administrative -legal Organisational and environment Competence-based VET Program and curriculum Professional Pedadogic- didactic

  9. Administrative-legal flexibility • Commission-Boekhoud: no central attention • Important condition for successful implementation

  10. Organisational and environmental flexibility • Is Impulse concept central part of strategic policy? • Is Impulse concept translated into operational policy? • Are the Impulse incentives put into action with the focus on strengthening the concept of career building and the transition within VET? • Is the environmental potential (schools, trade and business, lead bodies, others) used as a source for the realisation of the Impulse concept? • Do the lead bodies promote the transition within VET?

  11. Flexibility of programs and curriculum • Are training programs constructed taking into account the wishes and needs of students and clients (trade and business)? • Are there connections between attainment goals of the parts of the VET-column? • What do these connections look like (comparison-integration)? • Are there connections between the parts concerning work-based learning? • Are there possibilities for flexible access, flexible transfer en flexible testing?

  12. Pedagogic-didactic flexibility • Is there competence-based learning and training VET-wide? • Is there a competence-based education approach VET-wide? • Is there a longitudinal career building?

  13. Professional flexibility • Is professionalism aimed at strengthening the career and column concept a central part of the professionalism policy of VET-institutions and Lead bodies? • Are there connections between the parts within VET concerning this professionalism?

  14. Results concerning environmental flexibility • Impulse regulation has stimulated the cooperation between VET-institutions and between these and other institutions in the region • The cooperation with trade and business though is very difficult • Cooperation mostly bilateral • The cooperation is concentrated at the transition prevocational-secondary VET and less at secondary VET-higher education. Higher VET is mainly directed at general secondary education • Cooperation mainly at strategic level

  15. Results concerning organisational flexibility • The Impulse concept is mostly part of the strategic policy of institutions • There are big differences between the stage-management • The approach of radical innovations (such as integrated, longitudinal learning trajectories) is by way of pilots • Often here the greatest bottlenecks: engaging personnel difficult because of the late publication of the regulation, priority at primary process, difficult to arrange substitution of personnel

  16. Results concerning programmatic and curricular flexibility • In terms of the innovation cycle most activities are in the stage of development: a lot is sowed, harvesting still has to begin • Reconstruction of programs and curricula from a competence-based angle • Enormous variety: from orientation and exploring to completely integrated, longitudinal learning trajectories • Most qualification profit to be reached at trainings which have a lot in common

  17. Results concerning pedagogic-didactic flexibility • Here too mostly in the initial stage • There is a longer tradition • Here and there successful implementation • Longitudinal apprenticeship and work-based learning very rarely

  18. Stimulating factors Sharing of knowledge through cooperation and networking Clear frameworks Bottom up approach Adequate organisational and financial conditions Adequate project management Linking up with running innovations Looking for regional nearness Culturel aspects Impeding factors Law and regulations Image forming Relation with trade and business more difficult in economic heavier times Complexity in content and regional complexity Complexity of broad, multilateral networks of cooperation Stimulating and impeding factors

More Related