1 / 8

Organising Framework for Occupations

Organising Framework for Occupations. Background. OFO was developed to provide the detail that the SETAs require for good skills development planning & intervention in respect of both Equity & Skills Development.

leander
Download Presentation

Organising Framework for Occupations

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. Organising Framework for Occupations

  2. Background • OFO was developed to provide the detail that the SETAs require for good skills development planning & intervention in respect of both Equity & Skills Development. • The purpose of OFO is to help identify Scares & Critical skills within & across sectors in a way that is meaningful nationally. • The OFO is a Skills-Based coded classification system that encompasses all the current occupations in the South African context.

  3. OFO Classification of Occupations In the OFO, occupations are classified according to: • Skill Level is an attribute of an occupation, not of an individual. It can be measured by: • The level of formal education &/or training required to do the job • The amount of on-the-job training usually required to competently perform the set of tasks required for that occupation.

  4. Skill Specialisation is a function of the: field of knowledge required tools & equipment used materials worked on & goods or services provided in relation to the tasks performed. OFO Classification of Occupations (Cont)

  5. Definitions according to the OFO Job & Occupation The following definitions are applied in the OFO:- Job “A set of roles or tasks designed to be performed by an individual for an employer in return for payment”. Occupation “A set of specializations whose main tasks are characterized by such a high degree of similarity, that they can be grouped together for the purposes of the classification. This could encompass a number of jobs”.

  6. Structure of the OFO The OFO is constructed on occupations, not knowledge fields. Each occupation is described in detail primary roles & skill levels, tasks & specializations. Based on the Skill Level & Skill Specialisation, occupations in the OFO are divided into: • 1 Major Groups – Managers • 13 Sub-Major Groups – Specialist Manager • 132 Minor Groups – Business Administration Manager • 1323 Unit Groups – HR Manager • 132301 Occupations – Personnel/HR Manager The 6-digit level, i.e. Occupations, is the level that will be reported at in the WSP & ATR.

  7. Example of Occupation tracked according to OFO 1 Digit Professionals 2 Major Group 2 Digits Sub-Major Group ICT Professionals 26 3 Digits Minor Group ICT Network & Support Professionals 263 4 Digits Unit Group Computer Network Professionals 2631 263103 Network Analyst Occupation 6 Digits

  8. Levels of Occupations

More Related