1 / 15

Apprenticeship supply in the EU - Findings from a comparative survey -

Apprenticeship supply in the EU - Findings from a comparative survey -. Christiane Westphal European Commission DG Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion Meeting of the Advisory Committee for Vocational Training Brussels 29 June 2012. Policy context: youth unemployment crisis.

phuong
Download Presentation

Apprenticeship supply in the EU - Findings from a comparative survey -

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Apprenticeship supply in the EU - Findings from a comparative survey - Christiane Westphal European Commission DG Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion Meeting of the Advisory Committee for Vocational Training Brussels 29 June 2012

  2. Policy context: youth unemployment crisis EU youth unemployment over 22 % = 5.5 million unemployed aged under 25 Nearly 1/3 of low skilled youth on the labour market are unemployed Over 7.5 million young people 15-24 not in education or training or employment (NEET)

  3. EU Youth Opportunities Initiative • Priorities: • - preventing early-school leaving • - developing skills that are relevant to the labour market • - helping gain first work experience/training • apprenticeships and traineeships • - helping access the labour market and get a job • Delivery: • European Semester, Structural Funds, EU actions

  4. Good arguments for apprenticeships… • Combine theory imparted at schools with practical training in real work situations (enterprises) • Facilitate rapid school-work transitions for young people • Also used (by individuals or enterprises) as a tool for LLL • Facilitate identification of skill shortages and influence of companies on the VET training supply => linkage between productive system and training system • Provide “recruitment”, “productive” and “new Knowledge” benefits for enterprises

  5. Where do we stand? • VET often not regarded as valuable option, but: increasing importance attributed to workplace-based training • Constant definitiondilemma • Strong differences in apprenticeship-type schemes • Different intensity of workplace training • Different roles and relationships amongst parties involved

  6. Some aggregate figures (2009) • EU-27: approximately a total of 3.7 million students in apprenticeship in the strict sense • Another 5.7 million students attend other apprenticeship-type schemes (i.e. mainly school-based VET training with compulsory work-based training) • Together, EU businesses supplied company training positions for a total of 9.4 million students • = apprenticeship-type students represent approximately 85.2% of total secondary VET students and 40.5% of total secondary students in the EU-27.

  7. Insufficient vocational pathways

  8. Variety of systems • All MS: schemes at upper secondary level where workplace training plays a significant role => apprenticeship-type schemes • In 24/27 MS: VET schemes which can be labeled as mainly company based (i.e. > 50% of training in companies) -> apprenticeship system in a strict sense. • In 18/24 MS, company based apprenticeship coexists with other mainly school-based trainingschemes

  9. Are all actors involved?

  10. Who decides company participation ? Denmark: Trade committee of respective branch Estonia: Vocational schools France: Chambers Germany: Special bipartite VT committee Poland: Vocational schools Slovakia: Vocational Training Institutions Spain: Training centre Netherlands: 17 sector VET knowledge centres United Kingdom: Very few requisites for employers

  11. Student/Company relationship Criticalfactors: • Partiesinvolved • Contents • Remuneration • Exams and degrees

  12. Some crisis effects • More students interested in pursuing VET in some countries • Downward trend in the amount of apprenticeships and in-company training placements offered by enterprises • Reduced public resources for promoting apprenticeship-type schemes • Use of apprenticeship students as a kind of cheap labour • Increasing share of experienced unemployed professionals who try to find a job through an apprenticeship

  13. Wide range of challenges… • System design • Access and Provision • Inclusion

  14. Further information • http://bookshop.europa.eu/en/apprenticeship-supply-in-the-member-states-of-the-european-union--pbKE3012434/ • http://ec.europa.eu/social/yoi

More Related