Policies of school-to-work transitions and VET in Sweden, Denmark and Finland

Similar documents
VOCATIONAL QUALIFICATION IN YOUTH AND LEISURE INSTRUCTION 2009

Referencing the Danish Qualifications Framework for Lifelong Learning to the European Qualifications Framework

HE and VET, partnering for ensuring portability of qualifications and permeability among education and training systems

Post-16 Vocational Education and Training in Denmark

03/07/15. Research-based welfare education. A policy brief

Published in: The Proceedings of the 12th International Congress on Mathematical Education

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES RECOMMENDATION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL

NEETs and agriculture: a new approach for employability and entrepreneurship

Aalborg Universitet. Danish Research in the Sociology of Education Rasmussen, Palle Damkjær

A European inventory on validation of non-formal and informal learning

ESTONIA. spotlight on VET. Education and training in figures. spotlight on VET

Swinburne University of Technology 2020 Plan

Group of National Experts on Vocational Education and Training

Did we get to the right train?

Foundation Certificate in Higher Education

Summary and policy recommendations

Tuition fees: Experiences in Finland

God e-læring skabes i samarbejde Fugl, Jette; Monty, Anita

ANALYSIS: LABOUR MARKET SUCCESS OF VOCATIONAL AND HIGHER EDUCATION GRADUATES

2 di 7 29/06/

I set out below my response to the Report s individual recommendations.

PATHWAYS IN FIRST YEAR MATHS

Impact of Educational Reforms to International Cooperation CASE: Finland

Teacher Education and Co-Operation with Enterprises and Industries

The Society of Danish Engineers More than a Union

Initial teacher training in vocational subjects

PROGRESS TOWARDS THE LISBON OBJECTIVES IN EDUCATION AND TRAINING

Accounting & Financial Management

Fostering learning mobility in Europe

Co-operation between Higher Education Institutions in Oulu. 30. September 2015 Jouko Paaso President, CEO

HAAGA-HELIA University of Applied Sciences. Education, Research, Business Development

Tuesday 24th January Mr N Holmes Principal. Mr G Hughes Vice Principal (Curriculum) Mr P Galloway Vice Principal (Key Stage 3)

Lifelong Learning Programme. Implementation of the European Agenda for Adult Learning

State of play of EQF implementation in Montenegro Zora Bogicevic, Ministry of Education Rajko Kosovic, VET Center

The European Higher Education Area in 2012:

UPPER SECONDARY CURRICULUM OPTIONS AND LABOR MARKET PERFORMANCE: EVIDENCE FROM A GRADUATES SURVEY IN GREECE

3 of Policy. Linking your Erasmus+ Schools project to national and European Policy

Bachelor of International Hospitality Management

Collecting dialect data and making use of them an interim report from Swedia 2000

AUTHORITATIVE SOURCES ADULT AND COMMUNITY LEARNING LEARNING PROGRAMMES

EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES LOOKING FORWARD WITH CONFIDENCE PRAGUE DECLARATION 2009

VET Policy Report Austria. Sabine Tritscher-Archan and Thomas Mayr (eds.)

INSTRUCTION MANUAL. Survey of Formal Education

Annual Implementation Report 2010

PROJECT DESCRIPTION SLAM

Seinäjoki Vocational Education Centre. Ähtäri, Koulutie. Koulutie 16A, ÄHTÄRI Phone

Cross-case Analysis of Measures in Alternative Learning Pathways

PROPOSED MERGER - RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONSULTATION

Tavastia Way of Finnish Language Support during Vocational Studies. Tiina Alhainen Coordinator of Multicultural Issues Tavastia Education Consortium

Assumption University Five-Year Strategic Plan ( )

Executive summary (in English)

SOCRATES PROGRAMME GUIDELINES FOR APPLICANTS

Malaysia & Singapore [DK TRAVEL GD MALAYSIA & SINGAP] [Paperback] By DK Publishing"(Manufactured by)

Curriculum for the Academy Profession Degree Programme in Energy Technology

The KAM project: Mathematics in vocational subjects*

Analysing and Understanding the Demand for Schooling

Setting the Scene: ECVET and ECTS the two transfer (and accumulation) systems for education and training

Nottingham Trent University Course Specification

Present: Ehab Galal, Dietrich Jung, Jon Nordenson, Susanne Olsson, Christina Rothman, Leif Stenberg, Liv Tønnessen, Pekka Tuominen,

Aronson, E., Wilson, T. D., & Akert, R. M. (2010). Social psychology (7th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Master s Programme in European Studies

Post-16 Level 1/Level 2 Diploma (Pilot)

Students representation in institutional governance Case: Finland

Self-archived version. Citation:

The Finnish Academy for Skills Excellence (FASE)

Title II of WIOA- Adult Education and Family Literacy Activities 463 Guidance

EMAES THE EXECUTIVE MASTER S PROGRAMME IN EUROPEAN STUDIES, 60 HP

LCA Experiences in Danish Industry

Council of the European Union Brussels, 4 November 2015 (OR. en)

International House VANCOUVER / WHISTLER WORK EXPERIENCE

OECD THEMATIC REVIEW OF TERTIARY EDUCATION GUIDELINES FOR COUNTRY PARTICIPATION IN THE REVIEW

Business. Pearson BTEC Level 1 Introductory in. Specification

DISCUSSION PAPER. In 2006 the population of Iceland was 308 thousand people and 62% live in the capital area.

St Philip Howard Catholic School

ANNUAL SCHOOL REPORT SEDA COLLEGE SUITE 1, REDFERN ST., REDFERN, NSW 2016

Fieldwork Practice Manual- AHSC 435

HDR Presentation of Thesis Procedures pro-030 Version: 2.01

How to Judge the Quality of an Objective Classroom Test

BASIC EDUCATION IN GHANA IN THE POST-REFORM PERIOD

Assessment and national report of Poland on the existing training provisions of professionals in the Healthcare Waste Management industry REPORT: III

Partnership Agreement

THE EDUCATION COMMITTEE ECVCP

Contemporary Nordic research on workplace learning

INFORMATION What is 2GetThere? Learning by doing

Knowledge for the Future Developments in Higher Education and Research in the Netherlands

Shank, Matthew D. (2009). Sports marketing: A strategic perspective (4th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall.

Chiltern Training Ltd.

The Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC) provides a picture of adults proficiency in three key information-processing skills:

Beyond the contextual: the importance of theoretical knowledge in vocational qualifications & the implications for work

Centre for Excellence Elite Sports Program

This Access Agreement is for only, to align with the WPSA and in light of the Browne Review.

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION AND TRAINING THROUGH ONE S LIFETIME

Modern Trends in Higher Education Funding. Tilea Doina Maria a, Vasile Bleotu b

University of Groningen. Peer influence in clinical workplace learning Raat, Adriana

Contents. (1) Activities Units of learning outcomes and expert interviews... 2

University of Essex Access Agreement

OCR Teaching in the Lifelong Learning Sector Qualification Units

Innovative e-learning approach in teaching based on case studies - INNOCASE project.

New Education Division Documents No. 13. Post-basic Education in Partner Countries

The development of national qualifications frameworks in Europe

Transcription:

Roskilde University Policies of school-to-work transitions and VET in Sweden, Denmark and Finland Jørgensen, Christian Helms; Lundahl, Lisbeth ; Järvinen, Tero Publication date: 2017 Document Version Other version Citation for published version (APA): Jørgensen, C. H., Lundahl, L., & Järvinen, T. (2017). Policies of school-to-work transitions and VET in Sweden, Denmark and Finland. Paper presented at 45th Congress of the Nordic Educational Research Association (NERA), Copenhagen, Denmark. General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain. You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal. Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact rucforsk@ruc.dk providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 28. Jan. 2019

Policies of school-to-work transitions and VET in Sweden, Denmark and Finland Christian Helms Jørgensen, Tero Järvinen and Lisbeth Lundahl NERA 2017, Copenhagen, Denmark, 23-25 March Roskilde University

Background: changes in school-to-work transitions 1 2 3 Increasing educational attainment, changes in the youth labour market De-standardized, non-linear and non-stable labour market trajectories The increased role of education in successful transitions The weakening labour market and societal status of low-educated young people and young adults Early school leavers and NEETs as special target groups of European and Nordic youth and labour market policies Establishment of national and local transition policies Lack of comparative studies

Why to compare Nordic countries? 1. While sharing similar histories of welfare and educational policies, it seems that Nordic countries have embarked on different routes in this respect 2. While in many studies similarities between Nordic countries, in terms of youth transitions and educational equality have been found (e.g. Iannelli & Smyth 2008; Eurofound 2014); previous studies have also revealed differences within the Nordic countries in many asects of education (e.g. Lundahl 2012; Bäckman et al. 2015; Yoon & Järvinen 2016). Is it still justified to speak of a common Nordic regime of youth transitions, as suggested by Walther (2006)?

The objective and method of the study The objective of the study is to compare Swedish, Danish and Finnish school-to-work transition policies with special emphasis on NEETs, dropout and VET by utilizing a modified definition of transition policies by Eurofound (2012): Preventing dropout Measures to complete upper secondary education Facilitating school-to-worktransitions and employment Policy documents and programmes, statistics, previous studies of the authors

Policy contexts Level of marketization Sweden Denmark Finland Highly marketized education system concerning both basic and upper secondary education, the significant role of private schools Moderate marketization: A 'free' training market for apprenticeships, VET under corporatist control and state control of vocational schools. Low to moderate marketization, local public school markets, almost non-existence of private schools Upper secondary education, VET Comprehensive postcompulsory education, school-based VET targeted at young people under 20 Strong tracking and weak connections between general and vocational education, modernised version of apprenticeship training Non-comprehensive postcompulsory education, high attractiveness of school-based VET targeted also at adults Critical transition points 1) From lower to upper secondary education, 2) from upper secondary education to work or further education 1) From lower to upper secondary education, 2) from the initial schoolbased course in the VET-system to an apprenticeship in a company 1) From lower to upper secondary ducation, 2) from VET to employment

Comparison Preventing dropout Special needs education offered in- or outside ordinary schools Bridges from lower to upper secondary education: Preparatory and introductory programmes (Fi: 2%, Se: 28%) Extra tenth grade in compulsory school (Fi, Dk) Strengthening of educational guidance Special training programmes to re-integrate dropouts (Fi, Dk)

Comparison Completion of education Shifting policy measures to reduce dropout (Se, Dk) Second chances offered in adult education Validation of prior learning (Fi, Dk) Activation: Active labour market policies Supporting employability has priority over social benefits Tightening of the conditions for receiving benefits Activation in education increase the risk of dropout Fi, Dk

Comparison supporting transition to employment Emphasis on employability in upper secondary education Inclusion of more work-based training/internships in VET Youth guarantees in Se, Fi focus on employment/internships Educational guarantee in Dk focus on training placements Supporting transitions to employment in (Dk) or after VET (Fi, Se) The guarantees have limited effects for most disadvantaged youth

Conclusion The concepts Nordic, universalistic transition regime partly misleading, Steps from welfare towards workfare regimes Shift from priority on citizenship to employability Emphasis on choice and institutional individualisation of pathways Responsibilisation of young people also for transition failures! Increasing use of coercive measures and punishments

Conclusion Differences between the three Nordic transition regimes State-led and school-based VET-systems (Fi, Se): strong institutional support for the completion of USED, high risks in the transition to employment. Corporatist work-based VET-system (Dk) high risks of dropping out of USED, strong institutional support for the transition to employment. Thanks for your attention