Title: Quality within the EU VET package'
1- Quality within the EU VET package.
-
Contribution Tina Bertzeletou VET expert,
project manager.
PLV European Social partners on Quality
Development in VET
7-9 October, 2008 Berlin, Germany
2Who is Cedefop?
Since 1975, Cedefop has been the European Unions
agency to promote the development of vocational
education and training. Cedefop works closely
with the European Commission, Governments,
Employers and Trade Union associations, all of
which are represented on its Governing Board.
3Cedefops strategic objective
To contribute to implementing the Lisbon strategy
and the 2010 work programme in education and
training, the Copenhagen process, the Maastricht
communiqué and the Helsinki conclusions.
4Cedefop contributes through
5The European Union
- by 2013
- 14 million more older people
- 9 million fewer young people
- 2 million fewer VET-learners
- actually more than 70 million low-skilled or
unqualified people - cuts in the national budgets.
- Weakening of the European Social Model and
endangering social cohesion.
6A lot still to be done to meet the 5
education/VET-related benchmarks
- An EU average rate of no more than 10 of early
school-leavers - At least 85 of 22 year-olds in the EU should
have completed upper secondary education by 2010 - The EU average level of participation in lifelong
learning should be at least 12.5 of the adult
working age population (25 to 64 age group) - The total number of graduates in maths, science
and technology should increase by at least 15 - The EU percentage of low achieving 15 year-olds
in reading literacy, should have decreased by 20
by 2010, compared to 2000.
7 The EU strategy for Quality in VET Quality
in vocational education and training has been on
the agenda for many years in all the Member
States.
- Copenhagen Declaration (30 Nov 2002) promoting
quality assurance as a priority to enhance
cooperation in VET - Copenhagen Process Technical Working Group on
Quality in VET - The Maastricht Communiqué (14 Dec 2004)
emphasis on the implementation of the European
tools developed so far - The Helsinki Communiqué (5 Dec 2006) emphasis on
the attractiveness and quality of VET further
development, testing, implementation of common
tools and mutual learning - This focus on quality is in line with
the target set by the Barcelona European Council
in 2002 of making Europes education and training
systems a world quality reference by 2010.
8(No Transcript)
9The Copenhagen Declaration In November 2002 the
European Ministers of Vocational Education and
Training meeting in Copenhagen agreed to increase
voluntary cooperation in vocational education and
training focusing on quality in VET Promoting
cooperation in quality assurance with particular
focus on exchange of models and methods, as well
as common criteria and principles for quality in
vocational education and training was one of the
priorities.
10What is VET?
Education and training which aims to equip
people with skills and competences that can be
used on the labour market (CEDEFOP 2004).
What is quality? Quality is a construction and
not a clearly and well defined concept. In
general terms a service or a product is
considered of high quality, if it fulfils or even
surpasses our expectations. Different
stakeholders with different interests and
expectations perceive quality in a different way
since they have different requirements. Promotin
g cooperation in quality assurance with
particular focus on exchange of models and
methods, as well as common criteria and
principles for quality in vocational education
and training. (Copenhagen Declaration)
11The EU VET Package
Quality assurance in VET should play a
pivotal role in responding to the demand for high
level qualifications. Workers, learners and
trainers should be able to accumulate their
formal, non-formal and informal learning outcomes
and benefit from their recognition in whatever
country and system they acquired them on the
basis of the EU tools EQARF ,EQF, Europass,
ECVET, EU common principles for the validation of
non-formal and informal learning, the Mobility
Quality Charter and human resources development
issues. The implementation of those tools
entails the use of QA mechanisms.
12What is EQARF? It is a Framework to serve as a
reference instrument to help Member States to
support and monitor continuous improvement of
their VET systems. It is to be used as a
translation device for facilitating the
transparency of VET systems and provision
throughout Europe. Its use is voluntary. Is
based on a quality cycle that includes
planning, implementation, evaluation/assessment,
feedback, review of VET and provides for common
quality references. It provides a systemic
approach to quality, covering and interrelating
all VET levels and actors. It gives strong
emphasis to monitoring, combining internal and
external evaluation, review and processes for
improvement, supported by measurement/indicators.
It is a basis for further developments to be made
through cooperation at European, national,
regional and local levels.
13- EQARF Why a Framework?
- The diversity of developments across countries
entails a growing need for common European
references aimed at increasing transparency and
consistency between Member States policy
initiatives, while fully respecting their
responsibility for the governance of systems. - The European Commission presented in 2008 a
proposal for a Recommendation of the European
Parliament and of the Council on the
establishment of a European Quality Assurance
Reference Framework for Vocational Education and
Training (EQARF).
14The EQARF a systematic framework for QA
15 EQARF 4 Quality criteria
- Planning reflects a strategic vision shared by
the relevant stakeholders and includes explicit
goals/objectives, actions and indicators - Implementation plans are devised in consultation
with stakeholders and include explicit
principles - Evaluation of outcomes and processes is regularly
carried out and supported by measurement - Review.
- 43 Indicative descriptors at system and VET
provider levels facilitate the implementation of
the Framework.
16EQARF the indicators
- Relevance of quality assurance systems for VET
providers ( with internal QA systems and of
accredited VET providers) - Investment in training of teachers and trainers
( participating in further training and amount
of funds invested) - Participation rate in VET programme (no according
to type of programme and individual criteria) - Completion rate in VET programmes (no of
successfully completed/abandoned according to
type of programme and individual criteria) - Placement rate in VET programmes (destination of
VET learners and share of employed learners in
6,12,36 months after completion of training) - Utilisation of acquired skills at the workplace
(including satisfaction rate of
individuals/employers with acquired
skills/competences) - Unemployment rate (ILO and OECD individuals
15/74 without work actively seeking employment
and ready to start work) - Prevalence of vulnerable groups ( of
participation and success rate according to age
and gender) - Mechanisms to identify training needs in labour
market - Schemes used to promote better access to VET.
17EQARF the decision process
- Co-decision (EP Council)
- Adoption expected mid 2009
- Submitted to COREPER in October 2008, expected
common approach at November Council - Amendments
- voluntary character
- 4 years reporting period possible revision after
this period - participation of government representatives in
future European network - aggregation of indicators at national level to be
used as a tool box, descriptors and indicators
for self-evaluation of VET providers and not for
comparison between Member States. - ENQA-VET a voluntary network of 23 countries
18CEDEFOPs role in Quality in VET
- Technical and scientific assistance to the
Commission and setting-up of the group of experts
to elaborate the European framework for quality
assurance between 2001-2007 included. - Studies
- Glossary EN/FR
- Peer learning visits
- Virtual community on Quality assurance in VET,
http//communities.trainingvillage.gr/quality - First conference on the role and the
prerequisites of the Quality Assurance National
Reference Points to fulfil their mission (June
2008) - Scientific advice to the ENQA-VET Board.
19What is EQF?
- It is a meta-framework for increasing
transparency and mutual trust, enabling existing
qualifications frameworks and systems at
national/sectoral level to be related to each
other, thereby facilitating the transfer and
recognition of the qualifications of individual
citizens - It encourages the geographical and occupational
mobility of workers and learners and reduces
barriers to the functioning of the European
labour market. The implementation of the EQF by
the Member States is voluntary - Structure of 8 levels, descriptors
- Recommendation officially adopted on 23 April
2008 (2008/C 111/01).
20Quality in EQF
Quality assurance (QA) is a crucial dimension of
EQF to make comparison and transfer of
qualifications easier. Common quality principles
are a precondition to build trust between
national systems rendering co-operation effective.
21- Annex 3 states the following general principles
to underpin all levels of EQF - QA should include regular evaluation of
institutions, their programmes or their QA
systems by external monitoring bodies or
agencies. - External monitoring bodies or agencies carrying
out QA should be subject to regular review. - QA should include context, input, process and
output dimensions, while giving emphasis to
outputs and learning outcomes. - QA systems should include the following elements
- clear and measurable objectives and standards
- guidelines for implementation, including
stakeholder involvement - appropriate resources
- consistent evaluation methods, associating self
assessment and external review - feedback mechanisms and procedures for
improvement - widely accessible evaluation results.
- QA initiatives at international, national and
regional level should be coordinated in order to
ensure overview, coherence, synergy and system
wide analysis. - QA should be a cooperative process across
education and training levels and systems,
involving all relevant stakeholders, within
Member States and across the Community. - QA orientation at Community level may provide
reference points for evaluations and peer
learning.
22Focus on Learning Outcomes
EQF
Informal Learning
Learning Outcomes
Non-Formal Learning
Formal Learning
23What is ECVET?
The European credit system for VET helps devise
a credit transfer scheme in vocational education
and training to enable part of a course carried
out in another Member State to count towards the
final qualification in the home country.
24Complementarities between ECVET and EQF
ECVET
25ECVET for transfer and accumulation of learning
outcomes
1
Learning agreement
4
5
26The ECVET learning outcomes transfer process
1
KSC capital
Formal
Formal
Informal
On the job
1knowledge, skills, competence
27Requirements
- Commitment of competent bodies and all relevant
stakeholders - Transparency of processes and procedures
- Quality assurance
- Mutual trust.
28 What is Europass?
- A tool to increase mobility
- Five instruments
- Europass CV
- Europass language passport
- Europass Mobility
- Certificate supplement
- Diploma supplement
29Europass in figures
- Europass to help people move in Europe for
work, education or training. Cedefops Europass
website in 26 languages. Implemented in 32
countries. Addresses half a billion citizens. 12
million visits. - A tangible example of Cedefop helping citizens.
30Cedefop Europe 123, GR-570 01 Thessaloniki
(Pylea) Postal address PO Box 22427, GR-551 02
Thessaloniki Tel. (30) 23 10 49 01 24 Fax (30) 23
10 49 01 17 More information can be found
on http//www.cedefop.europa.eu/ http//www.tra
iningvillage.gr/etv/default.asp Email
tina.bertzeletou_at_cedefop.europa.eu