Title: Hugo LUEDERS, Director Public Policy Europe
1Public Policy and eSkills The European
Framework 2004
Federatie van de Belgische Verenigingen voor
Informatica Gent,
2 December 2003
- Hugo LUEDERS, Director Public Policy
Europe
2Overview
- Introduction and CompTIA Value Added
- 2. Major European eSkills Schemes
-
- Political Declarations by the EU eSkills Sector
- - 2001-2003 Barcelona, Athens and Hamburg
- 4. The eSkills Certification Consortium (eSCC)
- The European eSkills Forum
- The 2004 eSkills Roadmap
-
- 7. Conclusions Towards an EU MetaFramework
3 1. Introduction and CompTIA Value Added
4 eSkills Shortage vs Offshoring
- An eSkills gap equivalent to 1.2 mio jobs was
identified in - the EU in 2000, with a possible increase
to 1.5 mio in 2003 - In 2003, the eSkills gap has narrowed, but
not disappeared - The percentage of companies reporting
difficulties in - finding adequate personnel remains almost
the same - Focus in the media is now shifting to
offshore-outsourcing -
Any political reply? - EITO/IDC Survey 2001
eBusiness Watch Survey 2003
5 Lisbon the Goal and the Political Response
- Lisbon objective - EU most competive
knowledge- - based economy in the world by 2010
- How to achieve this with an eSkills gap of 1
mio? - Context EU Single Market interaction
between - high-tech workforce development and
European - competitiveness
- The policy response providing incentives for
high- - tech workforce development in Europe,
incl fiscal - measures for employers/SMEs and employees
6 CompTIA Value Added
- Worldwide not-for-profit ICT industry
association - Global voice for the ICT industry with
offices in all - major ICT industry regions (EU, US, A/P,
L/A, SA) - Some 15K corporate and 8K professional
members in - more than 80 countries (200 companies in
Europe) - Worldwide leader in vendor-neutral,
cross-industry - eSkills certifications (e.g. A, Linux,
Security, etc.) - CompTIA TechCareer Compass worldwide
- repository for training of a qualified
e-skilled workforce - Public Policy offices and advocacy support
capabilities - Brussels, Washington, Ottawa, Sao Paulo,
Hong Kong
7 CompTIA Value Added Europe
- CompTIA European public policy
cluster - eEurope/eEurope governance and regulatory
issues - (EU ICT Governence Tracker, Brussels
Newsletter, etc.) - Industry White Papers and advocacy
(Interoperability, e- - Invoicing, e-Recycling, Intellectual
property rights, etc.) - Initiative for Software Choice (ISC) public
procurement - Software Services Europe (SSE) European
industry - association for ASPs and other ICT enabled
services - High-tech Workforce Coalition (HTW) labour
development - eSkills Certification Consortium (eSCC)
public recognition - of industry and other informal eSkills
certifications -
8 Initiative for Software Choice (ISC)
- Objective to advance multiple competing
- software hardware markets unimpeded by
policy - Advocacy to advise policymakers about the
- benefits of software hardware choice
- based on merits value
against - money and not on mandatory
rule - Members some 300 corporate members
- worldwide - 60 in Europe alone
- Major activities in Spain, Irland, Baltics
9 eSkills Certification Consortium (eSCC)
- An CompTIA/HTW launched initiative for the
- public recognition and/or endorsement for
and use - of commercial, informal and non-formal ICT
- training certifications within government
endorsed - education and training frameworks across
Europe -
- Reason reliance on formal education with
limited - industry involvement, not on trilateral
associations - Starting to look afresh at the eSkills issue
(shortage, - gap and mismatch) by tacking referencing
practical - solutions tested by users in global
markets -
10 2. Major European eSkills Schemes
11Major European eSkills Schemes
- CEDEFOP - the European Centre for the
Development - of Vocational
Training - SFIA - the Skills Framework for
the Information Age - CareerSpace - Consortium of eleven ICT
companies EICTA - (eLIG - eLearning Industry Group)
- ECDL - European Computer Driving
Licence (CEPIS) - EUCIP - European Certification for
Informatics - Professionals
(CEPIS) - CEN/ISSS - Workshop on IT Profiles and
Curricula - and many more
12CompTIA Global ICT CareerPortal
- From the TechCareer Compass to the Global
CareerPortal - Worldwide portal with local web sites for each
country - CareerPortal will incorporate a multitude of
schemes - CareerPortal will be developed in conjunction
with major - ICT companies, governments, and academic
institutions - The aim is not to compete with other schemes
but to - reference them and to link up with them
- CareerPortal objectives are
- to deliver practical advice about
ICT careers - to link to job listings and to
available funded courses - to have facilities to assess current
eSkills - to compare with real vacancies, etc.
13 3. Political Declarations by the EU eSkills
Sector 2001-2003 Barcelona, Athens and
Hamburg
14Policy Declarations 2001-2003
- European industry analysts and the ICT training
channels and companies are convened annually by
CompTIA to address the status of the ICT training
. Following the last three events in Barcelona,
Athens and Hamburg respectively, industry policy
declaration have been issued outlining important
public policy considerations - The Barcelona Declaration (2001)
awareness - The Athens Declaration (2002)
potential - The Hamburg Declaration (2003) actions
www.comptia.com/sections/publicpolicy/workforce_
coalition.asp
15 The Hamburg Declaration 2003
-
- A strategic Roadmap for eSkills in Europe in
2004 - Recommendations to European Institutions Member
- States and Accessing Countries Governments,
relevant - stakeholders and the European e-Skills
Forum (ESF) - Introduced by the eSkills Certifications
Consortium (eSCC) at the CompTIA Europe
Strategies event, 24-26 - October 2003, Hamburg (some 200 ICT
participants) - Built on the call by the July 2003 draft EU
Constitution to stimulate cooperation on
training between educational or training
establishments and firms to facilitate change
(art. III/183)
16 Hamburg Policy Recommendations
- Organise a spring 2004 European workshop on
industry - eSkills certifications in co-operation
with the eSCC - Ensure fiscal and other financial support for
the - recognition of industry and other informal
eSkills - Extend the principle of cross-border public
recognition - to include industry eSkills training and
certifications -
- Organise a major European eSkills Conference
under - the Irish EU Presidency in June 2004 with
the eSCC - Address contribute to the EU eSkills
Meta-Framework
17 4. The eSkills Certification Consortium (eSCC)
18The e-Skills Certifications Consortium
- CompTIA-HTW initiative to secure public
recognition - of commercial and other informal eSkills
training - certifications within government education
frameworks - eSCC trilateral associative approach by
members drawn - from Governments, industry, and training
institutions - Aims to facilitate ICT training industry input
to the - European Commissions European eSkills
Forum
19The e-Skills Certifications Consortium
- Key eSCC objectives
- Promote the role of industry and other
non-formal - certifications within EU national education
frameworks - Harness industry efforts within a European
structure, - with National Chapters working to achieve
national - and/or regional endorsement/recognition of
industry - and other non-formal certifications
- Develop associative agreements with
stakeholders in - EU Member States to facilitate the
incorporation - of formal and non-formal eSkills training
and certs - within a European eSkills Meta-Frameworks
20 5. The European eSkills Forum
21 From Copenhagen 2002 to Thessaloniki 2004
- The Copenhagen Mandate
- the Copenhagen eSkills Declaration of Oct.
2002 called - to seek means to recognise
those qualifications - which have been achieved outside
formal education - The Tessaloniki Deliverables
- the Tessaloniki eSkills Conference of
June 2004 challenges - ? to comply with the recommendations
to stimulate - cooperation between education
and training firms - ? to make it easier for employees to
gain eSkills - qualifications recognised in
global markets (e-mobility) - ? to reduce public/private barriers
to eSkills acquisition -
-
22European eSkills Forum
- The Forum is composed of representatives of
-
- EU Member States, EEA/EFTA countries
- Industry and social partners
- Education and training communities
- OECD is also represented
- Four ESF Working Groups have been set up
- Supply and Demand (EICTA)
- Social questions (UNI-Europe)
- International Aspects, incl offshoring
(CEPIS) - Public Private Partnerships (eSCC)
- Final report to the European eSkills
Conference, 2004
23 6. The 2004 eSkills Roadmap
24 Next eSCC Workshop 9 December
2003, Brussels
- Subject Public recognition of
certifications The EU - eSkills Meta-Framework and the way forward
in 2004 - Participation Government representatives,
major ICT - companies and ICT training institutions, et
al. - Speakers Commission, OCR/UK, ECDL, CEDEFOP,
- Cisco, and CompTIA
- Roundtable discussion Public recognition of
eSkills - Certifications the EU eSkills Roadmap for
2004 - The March 2004 Workshop on eSkills
Certifications - You are invited to join!
25 Workshop on Industry eSkills
Certifications 24-25 March 2004, Brussels
- Organised by the Commission the eSkills Forum
- Trilateral stakeholders with more than 60
participants - Co-sponsored by CompTIA, eSCC and ICT companies
- The views of awarding bodies, academia, leading
ICT - and training companies and European
employers, - courseware publishers, EU Governments,
CEDEFOP, - and European Commission officials
- Strong participation of EU Member State
officials - Breakout session on eSkills outsourcing
offshoring - Cases studies of best practices in EU Member
States - Policy recommendations to the eSkills
Conference in - June 2004 - including the eSkills Forum
final report
26 eSkills Outsourcing Offshoring
Public policy recommendations
- Avoid protectionist legislation - but instead
- Promote investment in high-tech workforce
development - Ensure fiscal and other financial support for
the - recognition of industry and other informal
eSkills - Maintain strong intellectual property
protections - Promote next generation technologies and
eSkills - Provide risk capital for eSkills training
companies/SMEs - Redirect public funding towards ICT training
through - the recognition/endorsement of
industry - and other informal eSkills
certifications
27European eSkills Conference 2004
- 2004 expectations To make a real
contribution - Policy Report to the Commission in June 2004
- Based on sound and credible analysis
- Consensus of all stakeholders on key actions
- European e-Skills Conference in Thessaloniki,
June 2004 - Format similar to the 2002 eSkills Summit and
the - March 2004 workshop on industry eSkills
certs - eSkills Communication to the Council and the
EP - Launching of ten priority projects/initiatives
- EU Member States implementation
28 7. Conclusions Towards an EU MetaFramework
29Conclusions Towards an EU MetaFramework
- Unless policymakers recognise the competence
and - expertise of private and autonomous
training entities in - eSkills development for the knowledge-based
- economy, it will be impossible for Europe
to reach the - quality of eSkills training that present
times demand - Trilateral partnerships (Governments, companies
and - academic/training institutions) to develop
the needed - matrix approach for Meta-Frameworks to
integrate - into public endorsed schemes formal,
industry and - other non-formal eSkills certifications
alike -
30eSCC Contact
Hugo LUEDERS CompTIA Public
Policy Office Europe B-1040
Brussels, 6, Rond Point Schuman tel
32-2/234.78.22, mobile 32-475/63.33.52
e-mail hlueders_at_comptia.org
eSCC webpage
www.comptia.com/sections/publicpolicy/esc
c.asp