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Generic Skills: Three problems that explain why implementation fails

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Title: Generic Skills: Three problems that explain why implementation fails


1
Generic Skills Three problems that explain why
implementation fails
  • Geof Hawke
  • OVAL Research, UTS

2
A brief Australian history
  • ACTRAC Common core curriculum
  • Mayer Key Competencies
  • Mayer competencies 1 ?
  • Generic skills
  • Employability skills

3
International models
  • SCANS Workplace Know-how in the US
  • Two different models in Canada Employability
    Skills and Essential Skills
  • Three approaches in the UK Core Skills and Key
    Skills ? Main Key Skills Wider Key Skills
  • Key Competencies in Europe
  • Essential Skills in New Zealand

4
The conceptual problem
  • I want to suggest that all these ideas have
    developed around important conceptual problems.
    In particular
  • They are based on a false dichotomy
  • They confuse different categories of things
  • They draw heavily on unstated and unclear
    cultural, philosophical and political assumptions

5
1. The duality error
  • The notion is constructed upon the assumption
    that there are generic skills and other
    skills (usually understood as somehow specific,
    technical skills).
  • Rather, I contend that genericness is best
    understood as representing a continuum along
    which we might usefully recognise some categories.

6
ANZSCO
7
Levels of Generic-ness
Occupations
8
2. Category Confusion
  • Two types of category confusion apply in all or
    most of these approaches
  • The confusion of the general with the particular
  • The confusion of things such as attributes with
    things such as skill

9
2(a). General versus Particular
  • When we talk about, say, communications skills
    as if it was the same kind of thing as the many
    and varied instances that we recognise as
    examples of it, we commit a common logical error.
  • For a class to have a useful meaning there must
    be some set of rules that define which
    instances are members

10
3. The mis-specification error
  • If the notion of generic skills is such a
    useful one, a key question must be not why the
    various models share so many similarities? but
    why are they so different?
  • I argue that a central factor in these
    differences are the various cultural, political
    and philosophical assumptions that have shaped
    them.

11
What we mean by generic skills
  • A set of skills that
  • Applies broadly across contexts
  • Remains essentially the same across contexts
  • Underpins performance in different contexts
  • Transfer from one context to another

12
Why this matters
  • The false dichotomy means that the things we
    try to measure or report on are actually mixtures
    of things, some generalisations of others
  • The category confusion means that we try to apply
    standards of, e.g. certainty, to abstact concepts
    that dont admit to certainty

13
Why this matters
  • If we do not acknowledge the underpinning
    assumptions of a system, we cannot understand
    when it fails or proves inadequate

14
What might this mean?
  • It doesnt mean that there is no value in talking
    about generic skills.
  • It does mean that there are limitations or
    constraints on what such a system or idea might
    be capable of offering.
  • In particular, abstract generalisations are most
    often useful as frameworks for policy or
    practice, not as outcomes to be achieved.
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