Professor Pat Walsh, the Chair of the ITF opens the second
day of the conference. A drizzly, grey and windy day in Wellington, so good to
be indoors enjoying the conference and the company of kindred spirits.
Day two then begins with a keynote from the Honourable
Steven Joyce, former Minister of Tertiary Education, Skills and Employment and
author of an Australian report ‘Strengthening skills review of Australian VET
sector: Skills training reform: a Trans-Tasman view’. Provided background on
the Australian review and using this to comment on the current RoVE in NZ. The
review is now followed by putting into place, the recommendations. From his
viewpoint, Australia had viewed the NZ VET process as beening successful! And yet
NZ is in the process of a major change. Both countries challenged by the rapid
changes in the nature of work / employment and skill needs. All countries
experience cycles of rise and fall of student numbers. When employment is high,
there will be low in enrolments in ITPs. Australia has school leaving age of 18
and a very strong university sector, putting the squeeze on TAFEs with regards
to potential students. Asked the question, what is skills training and if it
did not exist, would we invent it? Yes. Common sense tells us that ‘learning by
doing’ / ‘earn while you learn’ involving experience and applied learning are required. If
we have VET, what are the attributes of the system. Most important to have
support of employers. NZ has taken 30 years to have growing numbers of trainees
and apprentices. Important to ensure the things that work are supported and enhanced.
VET must provide clear pathways for learners – i.e. school to VET and then
training to work. Always a challenge to start apprenticeships in new
industries. NZ has Skills pathway and better accessible information on careers.
Strong industry voice still required in schools. Pathways from study, whether
uni or VET, into work still a challenge. A good VET system must provide the
skills required by people to get a job. Flexibility and agility in updating
qualifications is important. Addition of ‘academic freedom’ into VET system
argued to perhaps not be required?! Moving to just one monolithic provision,
may stifle choice and eventually quality. Regulation across the sector still
important. Substantiated why NZ VET should not go through change as the system
is not broken and reasons for change are to shore up the public VET sector,
rather than enhance VET for learners and employers.
Then concurrent sessions begin and I attend the presentation
by Mandy McGirr managing director of McGirr Training, on ‘helping youth to
develop employability and to signal what employers seek--- soft skills,
transferable skills and work experience’. One of the purposed of education and
qualification system is employability development. Employability development
can be envisaged as a short or long game focus. Short game is getting a job and
can be any job, mostly low pay/security. Long game focus is to provide greater
mobility / progression / security (i.e. career managing). Asks the question ‘
what are the employability development support roles (or potential roles) of
the NZ public education / qualification system and its players? What is the
role or ‘value add’ of the VET systems? Who will do what role and how? Defined
for the purposes of her work, soft/non-cognitive skills, transferable skills,
work experience, signals and employability development. One resource – UK based
– what do employers seek when hiring young workforce entrants? In general
employers seek past experience and a range of soft/non-cognitive abilities.
Signals are important to connect the skills potential workers have with the perceived
required work /occupational skills. Third party signal senders (training
providers, referees, other verifications – drivers licence / badges /
micro-credentials) are part of the loop. Implications for supporting employability
include that gaining skills is only part of the challenge. Individual
signalling capability is an important contributor. Work experience provides one
key signal for suitability especially providing affordances for learning and
practicing soft skills. So what is the role of VET in the provision of employability development?
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