Le travail au coeur des apprentissages en entreprise
Pour une majorité d’employeurs, les compétences des salariés s’acquièrent moins par des formations organisées que par l’exercice du travail.
Le dispositif Defis permet de montrer que les salariés inscrits dans les dynamiques de travail les plus porteuses d’apprentissages informels sont également ceux qui accèdent le plus à la formation organisée. Ce constat est particulièrement marqué pour les salariés occupant les emplois les moins qualifiés
Céreq Bref n°353 avril 2017
PRATIQUE DES DISPOSITIFS ET RESSOURCES DE LA FORMATION PROFESSIONNELLE
Mobiliser et articuler les dispositifs de la formation professionnelle dans la gestion et la sécurisation de parcours professionnels des demandeurs d'emploi et des salariés.
Quels outils de repérage, de reconnaissance et de valorisation pour les individus et les entreprises ?
Le Réseau Emplois Compétences, animé par France Stratégie, publie son rapport sur les compétences transférables et transversales : comment les repérer, les reconnaître et les valoriser ?
Fruit de la concertation entre l’État et les partenaires sociaux, le Réseau Emplois Compétences a été mis en place en 2015.
Ses membres, observatoires de branches, observatoires régionaux et acteurs de l’observation et de la prospective sur les emplois et les compétences, ont choisi de travailler sur le repérage, la reconnaissance et la valorisation des compétences transférables et transversales, un sujet éminemment d’actualité.
PRATIQUE DES DISPOSITIFS ET RESSOURCES DE LA FORMATION PROFESSIONNELLE
Mobiliser et articuler les dispositifs de la formation professionnelle dans la gestion et la sécurisation de parcours professionnels des demandeurs d'emploi et des salariés.
Students told to use 'gender-sensitive' language
Students at the University of Hull are being told to use gender neutral language in their essays – or risk losing marks, writes Olivia Rudgard for The Telegraph. More...
University caught up in year-long naming dispute
Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences in Norway wants to become a full-fledged university, but if its pending application were to be approved, the institution does not yet know what it would be called, writes Carl Straumsheim for Inside Higher Ed. More...
Toyota and universities team up to study car batteries
Toyota plans to spend US$35 million on partnerships with several universities, including Stanford University, to study ways to make better batteries for electric vehicles, writes Brent Snavely for the Los Angeles Times. More...
University marks second anniversary since terror attack
Garissa University College recently marked two years since a terrorist attack on the institution that left 142 students dead. Unlike last year's ceremony, which was attended by local political leaders, this event was a low-key affair graced by students and a handful of people, most of them college staff, writes Philip Muasya for the Standard. More...
Bid to introduce student tuition fees finds resistance
A proposal by the Research Institute of the Finnish Economy to allow higher education institutions to introduce tuition fees for students from Finland and the rest of the European Economic Area has been met with resistance from the ranks of the Finnish government, writes Aleksi Teivainen for Helsinki Times. More...
Will tuition ruling impede American University of Cairo?
Egypt’s Administrative Court has ordered the administration of the American University in Cairo to accept tuition payment in Egyptian pounds rather than US dollars, raising fears of a decline in standards linked to reduced funding, writes Amr Eltohamy for Al-Monitor. More...
Higher education is reinforcing Kosovo's ethnic divide
As well as being affected by corruption, political collusion and poor levels of performance, universities in Kosovo also remain ethnically separated. Despite major international efforts, this separation has deepened since hostilities in Kosovo ended, although the topic remains largely absent from public debate, writes Ervjola Selenica for Balkan Insight. More...
High profile figures claim free speech under threat
An Auckland university professor has written an open letter rejecting the "forceful silencing of dissenting or unpopular views" on university campuses, reports the New Zealand Herald. More...