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Generic Employability Skills

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Generic Employability Skills Centre for Developing and Evaluating Lifelong Learning (CDELL) Aim To identify the scope that exists for regional and local interventions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Generic Employability Skills


1
Generic Employability Skills
  • Centre for Developing and Evaluating Lifelong
    Learning (CDELL)

2
Aim
  • To identify the scope that exists for regional
    and local interventions in the South West that
    will improve young peoples generic employability
    skills in areas of agreed priority need

3
Issues
  • The generic employability skills needs of young
    people (aged 16-21) in the SW
  • The extent to which these needs are being
    addressed by current policies, programmes and
    providers
  • The scope for interventions to improve young
    peoples generic employability skills

4
Research Design
  • Phase 1 Desk research
  • Phase 2 Field research
  • Phase 3 - Final report and
  • Follow-up

5
Phase 1 Desk Research
  • Highlighted the strategic and policy framework
    within which the study sits
  • Examined the ways in which the questions raised
    by this project have been addressed in previous
    work
  • Refined the focus for the Phase 2 fieldwork

6
Phase 2 Field Research 1
  • Semi-structured telephone interviews with
    employers, employees and providers
  • Consultation workshop involving local and
    regional policy makers and practitioners

7
Final Report and Follow-up
  • Carry projects recommendations forward in action
  • Establish the extent to which the projects
    recommendations are being carried forward
  • Identify any barriers to their implementation in
    the organisations involved.

8
Findings 1
  • The employers, employees and providers adopted
    holistic and integrated approaches to generic
    skills and knowledge, which included a wide
    variety of personal attributes and values.
  • The employees attached less importance to
    personal attributes than did employers and
    providers.

9
Findings 2
  • In referring to skills and attributes, the
    respondents not only used different terms to
    refer to the same skill or personal attribute,
    but also gave different meanings to seemingly
    identical terms.
  • Different employers valued and weighted
    employability skills and personal attributes
    quite differently.

10
Findings 3
  • Most of the employers and providers believed that
    there is a shortage of generic employability
    skills.
  • The employers identified deficiencies with regard
    to personal attributes rather than to generic
    skills.

11
Findings 4
  • The employers provided relatively little support
    in the workplace for the development of generic
    skills.
  • The employees had very limited understandings of
    the nature and importance of generic
    employability skills, and saw the acquisition and
    development of technical skills as the key to
    career progression.

12
Findings 5
  • Providers recognised that employability skills
    are more relevant to young people and employers
    if they see them as linked to the work context.
  • Providers across the region are attempting to
    integrate the delivery of employability skills
    into vocational courses. However, there is
    considerable variation in the methods used to
    assess, teach and foster the development of
    employability skills.

13
Recommendations 1
  • Strategies need to be developed to vigorously
    promote the importance of generic skills to all
    relevant groups. These strategies should ensure
    that employers, employees and providers clearly
    understand what generic employability skills are,
    why these skills are important, and what the
    role of the different stakeholders is in
    fostering the development and maintenance of such
    skills.

14
Recommendations 2
  • Strategies need to be developed to form
    partnerships between providers and employers so
    that employability skills frameworks, which are
    appropriate in different sectors (and
    localities), can be devised. These frameworks
    need to reflect the range of skills that
    employers, employees and providers deem to be
    relevant.

15
Recommendations 3
  • Strategies need to be developed share good
    practice in the teaching, learning and assessment
    of generic employability skills. The key topics
    are approaches to developing sector-specific
    employability skills frameworks approaches to
    integrating the development of employability
    skills into vocational areas and approaches to
    the assessment of employability skills.

16
Recommendations 4
  • Strategies need to be devised to increase the
    provision of on-going professional development
    for teachers, trainers and assessors

17
Consultation Workshop 1
  • Common language for generic skills
  • Centres of excellence in generic skill
    development
  • Support generic skills development through
    existing initiatives

18
Consultation Workshop 2
  • Work with employers to identify their generic/key
    skills needs
  • Respect sector differences and take note of
    initiatives in sectors
  • Encourage management cultures that emphasise
    skills development (as opposed to acquisition of
    qualifications)

19
Consultation Workshop 3
  • Encourage people to see generic skills as
    developing over time
  • Develop structured work experience for school
    students
  • Ultimate responsibility for generic skills
    development lies with the individual

20
Next Steps
  • Carry the recommendations forward
  • Monitor the implementation of the recommendations
  • New project
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