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Title: Summary


1
Summary Conclusions
the continuum towards a modern
TVET system
Presentation to

TVET Conference,
Beijing

for


Ministries of Finance / Education / Labour and
Social Security

18th May 2006
  • Ron Perkinson
  • Principal Education Specialist
  • International Finance Corporation
  • World Bank Group
  • www.ifc.org

2
Purpose of Case Studies
  • Create awareness of international best practice
    characteristics for TVET systems
  • Discuss and debate best practice characteristics
    for a modern TVET system
  • Target discussion at a broad policy level

3
Towards A More Integrated Education System
  • Market-led
  • More flexible and learner-centered
  • Blending vocational and academic education
  • Responsive to a countrys future economic and
    social development needs
  • Caters for lifelong learners
  • Accommodates career and learning pathways

4
Sample System Characteristics
  • Australia
  • Industry provides direction on how and where
    knowledge and skills best learned
    school vs. workplace
  • Industry skills advisory groups advise on
    competency
    standards and quality systems
    assessment, accreditation and qualifications
  • Private sector provide Industry-specific
    strategic direction covering

    market intelligence and skills needs
    quality management

5
Sample System Characteristics
  • Denmark
  • Extensive involvement of employees and employer
    organizations
  • System is paid for (in part) by employers through
    a national fund
  • Industry drives systems and standards
    representation by employees,
    employers, providers and government (minority)
  • Employers and employees responsible for
    developing programs and qualifications

6
Sample System Characteristics
  • Finland
  • Industry advises Ministry of Education
  • Ministry of Education manages TVET system
  • Providers, industry, business and unions involved
    in
    identifying skills
    requirements
    development of qualifications
  • TVET viewed as prestigious as university-based
    education

7
Creating the Vision
for a
Modern TVET System
8
Few Options for Career Pathways
9
Frameworks for Career Pathways
10
Four Pillars
  • Demand-driven / employer-led
  • Lifelong learning opportunities
  • Recognized qualifications / certified training
  • Quality / accreditation / monitoring

11
Employer-led / Demand-driven
  • Industry and provider collaboration
  • Must reflect Industry requirements
  • Should not be arbitrary view of provider or
    government
  • Needs Industry advice content and standards
  • Flexibility to be more entrepreneurial
  • Want certified training and academic
    qualifications

12
TVET Lifelong Learning
  • TVET is an important part of any lifelong
    learning system
  • Helps to foster career pathways

13
Qualifications Frameworks offer
one alternative
  • Integration between education and training
    between vocational and academic education
    reduces stigma/ increases prestige
  • Credit transfer
    progression up
    the qualifications ladder
    career pathways
  • Qualifications can be gained from schools,
    colleges, workplaces, community, training centers

14
Internationalization /
Foreign Partnerships
  • Case Study Examples
  • Fudan Pacific Finance Institute
  • CIBT School of Business
  • CIBT Automotive
  • China Power Industry

15
Accreditation Quality
  • Apply Industry standards for TVET
  • Assuring quality for learners
  • Promote provider confidence (public and private)
  • A cohesive accreditation and quality system
    should

    integrate relevant ministries
    roles and responsibilities

    enable external evaluations

    link with social and economic goals
    set
    key preformance indicators (more about outcomes -
    less about inputs)

    measure
    TVET providers against Industry-led performance
    indicators
    a by
    exception only intervention policy by government

16
Relevance
  • Industry will help policy makers enhance
    inter-dependence between theory and practice
  • Industry will advocate and guide policy on
    work-based training, apprenticeships and
    internships
  • Use of Industry practitioners important
    validating quality and
    accuracy of content more
    real world experience
  • China seeks mainly teacher qualifications rather
    than practical / industry experience

17
Further Food For Thought
18
Use of Information Communications Technologies
  • More scaleable - provide wider access
  • More convenient and flexible for continuous
    updating of knowledge and skills
  • Reaches lifelong learners
  • Review learning at own pace
  • High quality outcomes emerging

19
Examples SAC Fudan Pacific
  • Upgrading vocational diplomas to degrees
  • Updating knowledge and skills during employment
  • Keeping up with changes in Industry requirements
  • Flexible delivery
  • Learner-centered
  • Satellite distance delivery
  • Quality education outcomes
  • Lifelong learners

20
Are quota systems appropriate in
a more modern system?
  • How do they meet industry, learner and provider
    needs?
  • How are lifelong learners catered for?
  • Can they stifle private sector growth?
  • Modern systems (Quota or Non-Quota) will need to
    increase participation
    promote
    responsiveness to changing markets
    promote equity

    open access for worthy individuals

21
Private Sector is a
Critical Partner !!
22
Increasing Capacity in
Social Economic Development
  • Mobilizing private sector resources holds greater
    promise for expanding capacity in Chinas TVET
    system
  • Challenge for policy makers
  • Enabling regulatory environment for private
    sector investment is essential

23
Private Investors Will Avoid . . .
  • Smothering regulations that create commercial
    uncertainty
  • Political instability
  • Revenue controls / capping tuition fees
    can
    heighten commercial risk
    can
    jeopardize commercial objectives, including
    capability to invest in higher quality inputs
    can cause
    insufficient financial returns for servicing
    debt, or to provide fair returns to shareholders

    regulations limiting equity ownership
    (foreign)
  • Uneven playing fields

    where public and private
    institutions are not treated equally
    where inconsistent / uneven
    approval processes disadvantage private investors

24
The pathway ahead
25
New System Objectives
  • Achieve equitable outcomes
  • Enhance labor mobility
  • Acquire skills of economic relevance
  • Increase private sector investment
    optimize use of both
    public and private resourcing financing
    and provision
  • Possible social and economic outcomes
  • More highly skilled workforce more productive
    and competitive
  • More adaptable workforce
  • Improved employability
  • More harmonious society

26
Key Challenges for Policy Makers
  • Stronger connection between demand and supply
  • Improve system flexibility and adaptability to
    market needs
  • Shift from provider focus to needs of industry,
    learners and employers
  • Better integration of TVET in to formal education
    system - blending of vocational and academic
    education
  • More equitable regulatory framework
  • Increased education and training opportunities
    for learners with more diverse needs

27
Reaching Small to Medium Enterprise
  • Not easy problematic
  • Challenge for policy makers
  • Most successful models for engagement

    subsidized Secretariats
    Industry training
    groups

28
Key characteristics for a modern TVET system for
China might include . . .
  • Increased collaboration with industries and
    providers
  • Better partnerships between providers and
    industry
  • Employer-led strategies, systems and standards
  • Government engages industry to assess skills
    needs and improvre decision making
  • Focus more on TVET outcomes and less on inputs
  • Promote valued qualifications that blend
    vocational and academic education and promote
    lifelong learning

29
Adapting policy to meet needs of a constantly
changing market
  • Governments must have a willingness to adopt
    policies that promote a more demand-driven and
    employer-led system
  • Policy makers need to develop strategies that
    will mobilize private sector resourcing to fill
    the demand gap

30

No change is not an option !
A time for new visionaries
31
??? . . . ???!
It doesnt matter if a cat is
black or white . . . .
as
long as it catches mice.
Deng Xiaoping
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