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Association canadienne de la formation professionelle

 

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March-April 2024

CVA - ACFP







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CVA/ACFP Newsletter

March-April 2024


CVA DACUM TRAINING CALENDAR
September 2024 to March 2025

All workshops are delivered in virtual formal
unless demand would justify an in-person delivery 


The CVA will be pleased to accomodate any organization requesting
an in-house delivery of its DACUM Training Modules
if such organization commits to registering a minimum number of individuals.
For more information on DACUM :
here





CVA’s PICK OF THE MONTH

Transforming technical and vocational education and training for successful and just transitions: UNESCO strategy 2022-2029
Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) connects education and the world of work, unlocking the potential of young people and adults for a brighter future. Yet, it is estimated that 267 million young people are not in employment, education or training. This strategy presents UNESCO's vision to transform TVET for successful and just transition, by promoting skills development for empowerment, productive employment and decent work, and facilitate the transition to more digital, green and inclusive economies and societies.
En français. Transformer l’enseignement et la formation techniques et professionnels pour des transitions réussies et justes : stratégie UNESCO 2022-2029
Source: UNESCO



ARTICLES and PAPERS

Canada. Lessons Learned & Best Practices for Success for Women in Apprenticeship & Skilled Technical Jobs (Paper)
Best Practices to increase success for women in apprenticeship and the skilled trades require ongoing collaboration and support between women training, entering and working in technical fields, and their partners in government, industry, unions, educational institutions as well as community agencies working in the field towards this success. Historically, we have often seen one or another of these groups initiate an intervention, but little has changed because the other partners were not at the table.
Source: ResearchGate

Germany. Transfer in international VET cooperation: Development of a typology (Paper)
The study aims to identify the understanding of transfer of vocational training service providers in internationalisation projects, as well as different types of transfer. The transfer itself is determined by the project activity rather than by a pre-determined understanding of transfer on the part of the internationally active VET provider. In turn, the project activity shapes the type of transfer in combination with the project partners in the target country context. The project actors focus on structures and content; the transfer of practices and processes is largely understood implicitly and thus less directly forced.
Source: Wiley/International Journal of Training and Development 

oPt. Planning the post-war reconstruction and recovery of Gaza
Gaza has witnessed an almost complete destruction of economic activity in all sectors. In the immediate post-war situation, some emergency employment programmes will be “critical to provide incomes to workers who have lost their jobs” as they seek to support their families. It is expected that micro and small enterprises will need emergency grants and wage subsidies as part of the process of restoring activity and to facilitate local economic recovery. Extensive skills development and vocational training will also be required. 
Source: UN News 

Switzerland. Does Updating Education Curricula Accelerate Technology Adoption in the Workplace? Evidence from Dual Vocational Education and Training Curricula in Switzerland (Paper)
This paper examines whether updates of education curricula help to bring new technologies faster into firms’ workplaces. We take a text-as-data approach and tap into two novel data sources to measure change in educational content and the use of technology at the workplace: first, vocational education curricula and, second, firms’ job advertisements. Our results show that curriculum updates substantially shorten the time it takes for new technologies to arrive in firms’ workplaces, especially for mainstream firms.
Source: IZA – Institute of Labor Economics

USA. Taking a skills-based approach to building the future workforce
Companies have recognized that skills-based practices are a powerful solution to challenges that have intensified since the pandemic. Employers have struggled to find the right candidates for important open positions and then keep the talent they hire. Through a skills-based approach, companies can boost the number and quality of applicants who apply to open positions and can assist workers to find more opportunities to advance internally, which can help employers improve retention. It also helps communities by creating more and better job opportunities for a broader, diverse pool of workers.
Source: McKinsey

Structuring the complexity of drop-out from VET: a theoretical framework guiding empirical research perspectives (Paper)
After more than 50 years of research on drop-out from Vocational Education and Training (VET), databases provide vast amounts of drop-out studies from around the globe that entail hundreds of potential drop-out factors. However, many scholars tend to explore the topic without detailed and theoretically grounded foundation. The presented framework will help organising the research field and enable scholars to delimit their work more precisely, leading to a more traceable structure of further research efforts and more significant contributions to the state of knowledge.
Source: Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training 

Beyond the training gap: learning foundational skills on the job
Low-skilled workers tend to have jobs that are less likely to foster foundational skills. This worsens skills gaps and income inequality.
Source: Bruegel

Refugees and VET
The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) defines refugees as people who have fled war, violence, conflict or persecution and have crossed an international border to find safety in another country. This issue outlines the role vocational education and training (VET) plays in helping refugees and displaced persons integrate into their new communities. It also discusses the barriers and obstacles refugees face and the potential role of technology to improve access to VET and deliver innovative educational solutions.
Source: VOCED

The world is failing to meet SDG 8: how to achieve decent work for all by 2030?
Trade unions are working against the clock to overcome the obstacles to achieving the 2030 Agenda and its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The UN reports are unanimous: the world is far from achieving the 2030 Agenda. Neither the funds made available nor the political action being taken are sufficient to deliver on the promise of building a better world that leaves no one behind. In its 2023 edition, the SDG 8 Monitor assessed the situation in more than 150 countries, covering more than 98 per cent of the world’s population.
Source: Equal Times


DOCUMENTS

Canada. Career Development in 2040 
The report digs into the trends that workers, employers – as well as those who advise them – need to understand to thrive in a labour market facing massive disruption. Based on an extensive literature review of as well as interviews with career development professionals (CDPs) and career services users, the reports highlights 10 major trends. 
En français. Canada. Le développement de carrière en 2040
Source: CERIC

Canada. From high school, into postsecondary education and on to the labour market
This fact sheet provides metrics on how young Canadians move from largely compulsory secondary education, into and through their postsecondary experiences and finally onto the labour market. It brings together the latest indicators that can provide insight into these pathways.
En français.Canada. De l'école secondaire à l'enseignement postsecondaire et au marché du travail
Source: Statistics Canada

India. The functioning and regulation of public-private partnerships in skills development: the case of India’s National Skills Development Corporation
This paper features the case of NSDC, established as a public private partnership between the Government of India and several industry bodies. The very structure of this partnership with the private sector as the majority stakeholder, emphasizes the important role given to the private sector. NSDC was explicitly created to catalyse private sector support by expanding the capacity and scale of skills training programmes, enhancing the quality and relevance of training programmes, and improving the employability of youth, through formal sector employment or entrepreneurship.
Source: UNESCO

Zambia. Promoting Skills Development for Youth in Zambia : A Review of the Landscape of TEVET and Skills Development
An overview of Zambia’s labor market, highlighting key potential sectors for future economic development and employment growth. It also analyses the challenges faced by the technical education, vocational, and entrepreneurship training (TEVET) system as it seeks to respond to these developments. A key finding of the report is that Zambia is not reaping the benefits of its potential demographic opportunities due to high levels of youth disengagement and insufficient jobs growth. Youth constitute more than half of the labor force but have low skill levels and are in low-paying jobs. Skills development, and TEVET in particular, is one of the possible policy levers for economic development and is a strategic focus and priority for the government. 
Source: World Bank

West and Central Africa. Attacks on education in West and Central Africa on the rise
Attacks on education in West and Central Africa have increased in the past 10 years and universities have not been spared. Most of the attacks occurred in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mali, Niger and Nigeria and were perpetrated by armed conflict groups and government armed forces.
Source: University World News

EU, Norway and Iceland. Next generation skills intelligence for more learning and better matching
Collecting data and information on labour market needs and skills trends is not sufficient to design and sustain responsive and efficient vocational education and training (VET) programmes and skills formation systems. Economies and societies need robust skill anticipation methods and trusted skills intelligence to translate data into actionable insights that support the skills revolution.
Source: CEDEFOP

How Skills and Employability initiatives contribute to peace in the framework of the Humanitarian, Development and Peace Nexus
Skills development initiatives can help prevent conflict and strengthen peace in fragile and conflict-affected contexts. If designed or adapted appropriately, they can strengthen inclusive social dialogue and trust between groups and increase people’s sense of inclusion and their resilience to disruption and violence, through increased employability. Peace can be achieved by adopting peace and conflict analysis, conflict- and gender-sensitivity measures, a social dialogue- based approach, and a strong focus on fairness and inclusion.
Source: ILO – International Labour Organization


OTHER

Survey. Canada. Participation in Skills Training: A Report from the Survey on Employment and Skills

The COVID-19 pandemic severely disrupted the workplace. The survey finds that working from home does not appear to have posed a barrier to skills training to date, as those who have switched to working from home are more likely than those who continue to work in their regular workplace to access training to improve their skills.

En français. Canada. Participation à la formation professionnelle : Rapport de l’enquête sur l’emploi et les compétences
Source: Future Skills Centre

World University Rankings 2024
The rankings 2024 include 1,906 universities across 108 countries and regions.
– The University of Oxford tops the ranking for the eighth year in a row. 
– The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) climbs up two places to third this year.
– The highest new entry is Italy’s Catholic University of the Sacred Heart. However, the majority of the institutions  joining the ranking for the first time this year are in Asia. 
-The US is the most-represented country overall, with 169 institutions. With 91 institutions, India is now the fourth most-represented nation, overtaking China (86).
– Four countries enter the ranking for the first time are in Europe (Kosovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia and Armenia).
– Stanford University leads the teaching pillar, while the universities of Oxford and Cambridge come top for research environment.
– The University of Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates scores highest in international outlook.
Source: Times Higher Education

How To Develop Winning Learning and Development Strategies
Learning and Development (L&D) strategies impact an organization’s business decisions by highlighting the development of the specific skills required to expand to new markets or remain competitive  Training can be costly and takes away time from employees doing their daily tasks. As such, it is essential to align your L&D strategy with your organization’s overall strategy for maximum ROI. 
Source: AIHR – Academy to Innovate HR

ANNOUNCEMENT. IVETA VISION CONFERENCE: DEC 4-7, 2024 San Antonio, Texas
THEME: Evaluating TVET workforce development policies & programs to improve economic & social outcomes
The IVETA Conference is being planned in parallel with the annual US Association for Career & Technical Education (ACTE) Conference https://www.careertechvision.com where IVETA started 40 years ago. The joint conference provides IVETA members with the opportunity to: (i) share information at IVETA presentations, (ii) visit a Community College and attend an IVETA evening reception (iii) attend some of the 300 ACTE presentations on all technical areas & levels with the 5000 TVET professionals at the ACTE conference; and (iv) visit an expo of 250 exhibits of TVET goods/services. Go to  https://iveta.global/event-directory  scroll down to “December”
How To Submit a Proposal to Make a Presentation At The IVETA Conference
By May 27 send a short resume, and a 300-word summary of your proposed presentation which should address the theme of the conference, to David Fretwell ivetavpna@gmail.com, Vice President North American IVETA.  
How to Register and Pay Conference fees
ACTE is handling IVETA registration. IVETA members will have a discounted rate of $345 (about 2/3 what other participants pay). This provides IVETA members with access to all IVETA activities as well as 300 ACTE presentations on all levels and technical areas of TVET, and an exhibition of 250 TVET goods and services. The discount code for registration is available to IVETA members on request so you can register at https://www.careertechvision.com. To join or renew your IVETA membership go to https://iveta.global/membership/
For Other Questions
For more detail on the IVETA conference program as it develops, including the Conference Registration discount code, check updates at https://iveta.global/event-directory/ and/or contact Dr. Fretwell via electronic mail ivetavpna@gmail.com




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