1 / 30

Formaat Flemish Federation of Youthclubs

Formaat Flemish Federation of Youthclubs. Youthclub: A place where young people get together, meet other people and organise activities like parties, different workshops, gamenights, … Run by young people (volunteers) Main task: Supporting and stimulating the flemish youthclubs

regina
Download Presentation

Formaat Flemish Federation of Youthclubs

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. Formaat Flemish Federation of Youthclubs • Youthclub: • A place where young people get together, meet other people and organise activities like parties, different workshops, gamenights, … • Run by young people (volunteers) • Main task: Supporting and stimulating the flemish youthclubs • Documentation and information about the (youth)policy,youthwork, insurances,… • A variety of workshops and question-based education • We create platforms where youthclubs can meet each other and exchange experiences

  2. Recognition and identification of competences • Why Apel? • Young people learn a lot as a volunteer in a youthclub • Responsability, working together, respect for other peoples work,… • They actually learn by doing • Different from the more formal learning in schools • We want make those learning experiences more visible.

  3. Recognition and identification of competences • Focus on the recognition and identification of competences by young people • Primary goal: • To enable young people to become aware of their capacities • Focus on the personal development of young people • A person is aware of what he’s capable of. If he can identify, recognize and prove his competences.

  4. Recognition and identification of competences • Difficulties: • Reflecting on own behaviour is often confronting and threathening. • The concept ‘competence’ is often a new concept for youngsters • Youngsters sometimes don’t link what they do in a youthclub with learning.

  5. Recognition and identification of competences • Formaat Open Youthwork Flanders wants to develop a methods to support young people in the process of becoming aware of their competences. • Important goals of these methods • To make clear that young people also learn a lot of things in their involvement as a youthclub - volunteer • To introduce the concept ‘competence’ • To learn young people to think in terms of competences • To stimulate youngsters to reflect on their own behaviour and competences

  6. Identification, Recognition and Validation of competences obtained in youthwork • Timing: from august 2006 till 15 october 2007 • Location: Province of West-Flanders • General Goal: ‘Youngsters are aware of the competences they obtain through a voluntary involvement in youthwork. This competences play an important role in their personal and professional development.’ • To achieve this the research is split into three phases.

  7. Fase 1: Research in Youthclubs • Goal: ‘Youngsters are aware of the competences they obtain through a voluntary involvement in a Youthclub' • Most important tasks • The development of a list of the keycompetences (and their most important indicators) that can be obtained in Youthclubs • The development of a methods to recongize competences of youngsters • Timing • September 06 till March 07

  8. Fase 2: Introduction of the project to the other forms of youthwork • Goal: • ‘Youngsters are aware of the competences they obtain through a voluntary involvement in youthwork.’ • Most imporant tasks • The organisation of a conference to introduce our project to other kinds of youthwork and share visions about the recognition of competences obtained in youthwork • Invite youthworkers and organizations to adjust the developped methodology to the context and demands of the broader youthwork. • Timing • March 07 till june/july 07

  9. Fase Three: introduction of our project to the jobmarket. • Goal: ‘Competences obtained in youthwork are valuable to the personal and professional development of youngsters’ • Most important tasks: • The organization of interviews with partners from the employability-sector to learn how they feel about the usefullness of the validation of competences obtained in youthwork. • The development of a document enlisting a few important criteria for an instrument for the validation of competences obtained in youthwork

  10. What is and will developped? • List with 23 keycompetences • A toolbox with methods for Youth workorganisations

  11. List of Keycompetences • We developped a list of keycompetences young people generally can obtain in Youthwork. • What are keycompetences? • Why keycompetences? • Which keycompetences can be obtained in a youthhouse?

  12. Keycompetences? • Competences generally can be divided in two categories • Professional or technical competences: • Obtained and used in a professional context • Job- and task- related • ‘Learning for job’ (Baert) • Examples: knowing how to write a report, … • Keycompetences or generic competences • obtained and used in different aspects of life: work, school, sports, hobbies, at home, in youthwork • Key competences are multifunctional • Key competences are unbearable for ones personal development • ‘learning for chance’ (Baert) • Keycompetences are strongly contextrelated • Examples: flexibility, problemsolving skills, responsabilty,…

  13. Why Keycompetences? • Youthwork and youthclubs are places youngsters can freely experiment with competences (Ambach & Hatse, 2004). • In their engagement they learn and use a variety of skills and competences that are important for their further life and carreers.

  14. Which keycompetences • The Flemisch federation of Youthclubs wants to identify the keycompetences youngsters generally learn and use in their involvement as youthwork-volunteer. • Based on the insights following the recent projects we put together a list of 23 competences

  15. List of key competences • Based on interviews with youngsters and youthworkers, internal and academic research and existing lists of competences. • 23 keycompetences divided in three subcategories • Social competences • Personal competences • Task-related competences

  16. List of keycompetences

  17. List of keycompetences • How is each competence described? • An objective and theoritical description • A concrete example to link the competence to the context of a Youthclub • A list of actions in which the competence is used.

  18. List of keycompetences • For example: The competence ‘Autonomy’ Description: The youngster knows how to plan, carry out and controle a task autonomiously and asks for help when needed Example: Joline can take care of an openingnight of the youthclub on her own. Actions: The youngster knows what’s needed to carry out a certain task. The youngster can carry out tasks on his own. The youngster respects appointments.

  19. List of keycompetences • The most important goal of the list is to clarify what young people can learn as a volunteer in a youthclub - youthwork . • The learning in a youthclub is not limited to the skills described in this list!

  20. Toolbox for Youthwork organisations • We want to give youth(club)workers methods to help young people become more aware of the competences they obtain through youthwork. • Elements of the toolbox: • An eductional game about competences • A method to reflect on the insights folowing the competence game • The list of competences • Information about the importance of APEL in Youthwork • Guidelines to work with the toolbox

  21. Competence game • Competence-Sprint • General goals: • introducing the concept ‘competences’ to young people • To show volunteers they actually can learn a lot as a volunteer in a youthclub (or in youthwork in general)

  22. Competence game • Concept: • Based on the popular game ‘Levensweg’ • The players fictively obtain a number of competences through voluntary work in a youthclub. • These competences will be used later in the game to deal with certain problems and difficult situation. • Two game phases • The Youthclub • The real life

  23. Competence game • Jeugdhuisfase • Players fictively involve themselves as volunteer in a youthclub • In their activities they can learn a variety of competences.

  24. Competence game • Real Life • Here the players will be confronted with a variety of problems and situations. • Funny twists • Race concept • The game is over when the players cross the Finish • The player with the most points is te winner

  25. Reflection on the Game • After the game we want to let the players reflect on their own competences • Wich competences have they obtained in a youthclub an how • Wath are they good in and what not? • Main goal of the reflection • To have a more clear view on the own competences and how they were obtained

  26. Thank you for your kind attention, I’ll be happy to answer any further questions

  27. Discussion • What do you think of the accreditation of competences obtain through youthwork? • Is a version of the competence game usuable in your context and how? • Are Young people interested in Apel? • Is accreditation of competences obtained in Youthwork possible? • Do you develop methods for APEL and if so … ?

More Related