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17 février 2013

Tried and tested "Youth Guarantee" must now be applied throughout the EU

http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Images-ContentManagement/committee__of_the_regions.gifEurope's cities and regions have called on EU ministers to swiftly agree to plans to guarantee all young people up to 30 years old quality employment, education or training opportunities to boost growth and avoid creating a "lost generation". They stress that a lack of investment and proper local and regional authority involvement could seriously jeopardise the scheme’s success.
Europe's cities and regions have called on EU ministers to swiftly agree to plans to guarantee all young people up to 30 years old quality employment, education or training opportunities to boost growth and avoid creating a "lost generation". They stress that a lack of investment and proper local and regional authority involvement could seriously jeopardise the scheme’s success.
The EU's Committee of the Regions (CoR) has backed plans to offer a "Youth Guarantee" for all young Europeans which will be co-financed by EU cohesion funds.
With unemployment among young people in Europe standing at 5.7 million, the European Commission was asked by the Council to propose a Youth Employment Package which included a recommendation to introduce a Youth Guarantee - an assurance that no young person up to the age of 25 will be left without employment, training or education for more than four months. Read more...
17 février 2013

Entrepreneurship education needs to be boosted

http://europa.eu/rapid/exploit/2013/02/MEMO/EN/m13_77.eni/Pictures/100000000000010900000083F2518BF1.jpgBetween 15% and 20% of students who participate in a mini-company programme in secondary school will later start their own company, a figure that is about three to six times of that of the general population. Investing in education for entrepreneurship is one of the highest return investments policy-makers in Europe can make to support growth and business creation. Yet, according to a recent Eurobarometer Entrepreneurship survey three quarters of Europeans say that they have never taken part in an entrepreneurship course. The acquisition of entrepreneurial abilities also enhances the employability of our youth: according to recent research, 78% of entrepreneurship education alumni were employed directly after graduating at university, against 59 % of a control group of higher education students.
Today in Bologna at the fourth meeting of EU SME envoys, European Commission Vice President Antonio Tajani, Commissioner for Industry and Entrepreneurship, presented recent Commission projects on educating the educators (see below). The SME envoys also discussed with VP Tajani and EU SME envoy Daniel Calleja Crespo the Entrepreneurship Action Plan launched in January, which contains initiatives for entrepreneurial education and training. Read more...

17 février 2013

VET-Alert

VET-Alert - Just published on Vocational Education and Training - February 2013 issue
Cedefop's "VETAlert" for February 2013 is now available for download: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/newsletter/vetalert-newsletter.aspx.
VETAlert is a monthly selection of publications on vocational education and training available from Cedefop’s bibliographic database VET-Bib.
Please subscribe to VET-Alert and you will receive this monthly review in your mailbox.
  • VETAlert - no 2 - February 2013 PDF  Current issue
  • VETAlert - no 1 - January 2013 PDF.
17 février 2013

Unemployment continues to grow in the EU, but at a slower pace now

The unemployment rate in the EU has peaked at 10.5% (higher than in 2008 by 3.4 percentage points). But between 2010 and 2012 it grew less, with some countries reporting stable or even declining trends. VET policies play an important role for social inclusion and employability. This role becomes even more important in the current economic downturn.
Data presented here consider unemployment rates at different points in time. The indicator of change is the difference (expressed in percentage points) between levels of unemployment rates at different points in time. A positive value indicates that the unemployment rate has gone up in the period considered. A negative value indicates that unemployment has decreased. Read more...

17 février 2013

UNESCO presentation why a MOOC should be mobile

Inge Ignatia de WaardBy Inge Ignatia de Waard. MOOCs are getting everyone excited. While most of the discussions focus on the impact of MOOCs on Higher Education, the focus of the presentation below will be on the effect of mobile accessibility on learner interactions, as well as overall description of the MobiMOOC case (a MOOC course on mobile learning).
The presentation will be shown and discussed during the upcoming UNESCO mobile learning week in Paris, France and a short description of the presentation can be found here. The mLearning week will get a lot of good people together to analyse mobile learning across the globe and see where we can be heading to ensure education for all (or at least increase educational access). If you want to follow what is happening during the mLearning week, you can also follow the #mlw2013 hashtag.
There will also be some online webinars that are open to all, so if you cannot make it to Paris, make sure you log on to the webinars (look at the right menubar once the link of the webinar opens for more information).
17 février 2013

GT and Coursera’s MOOC stumble: Why they are still experiments

http://s0.wp.com/wp-content/themes/pub/blix/images/spring_flavour/header_bg.jpgSince I do write about MOOCs a lot here, it would be disingenuous of me not to report on the Coursera MOOC that got pulled, especially since it was from Georgia Tech. I think this is an example that proves MOOCs are still experiments. This would be a much worse story if this was a required course, or one that students had paid tuition for.
The course got off to a bad start; one student reported that the first e-mail he got from the instructor “was not an introduction to the course per se, nor instructions for getting started, but rather an apology for the technical glitches that were, unbeknownst to me, already occurring.” Read more...

17 février 2013

European student numbers rise, but funding falls

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Rok Primozic. The conception of higher education as a public good and a public responsibility is changing. Most European countries use cost sharing and there is a trend towards shifting the burden of study costs onto students. There are not many countries left in Europe that do not charge their domestic students some form of tuition fees – some 19 out of 26 countries observed in a two-year research project organised by the European Students' Union (ESU) and with the name Financing the Students’ Future (FINST), do so. Denmark, Finland, Malta, Slovenia, Sweden and Norway do still have tuition-free higher education systems, at least at undergraduate level. Austria does not formally recognise tuition fees within its legal system, but universities can decide for themselves whether to charge for tuition or not. Several countries – such as Hungary, Poland and Slovakia – offer subsidised places where some students do not have to pay tuition fees, usually according to academic ability. Read more...
17 février 2013

On different pages in the differentiation debate

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Johan Muller. Research in South Africa over the past eight years has clustered universities into groups based on performance indicators. It has made visible long-term stability and shorter-term dynamism in the higher education system, and contributed to the debate on differentiation. The Centre for Higher Education Transformation (CHET) has been a vigorous proponent and sponsor of the ‘differentiation debate’ in South African higher education. The latest instalment was a seminar held on 24 January 2013 in Cape Town. CHET’s signal contribution to the debate has been to construct a set of performance indicators, initially based largely on research and research-related indicators, which made visible for the first time a distribution of the country’s universities, revealing distinct clusters of institutions. Read more...
17 février 2013

Germany's Research Rating will make quality its own reward

Click here for THE homepageBy Elizabeth Gibney. New assessment scheme will not be used to direct cash to institutions.
As the UK braces in anticipation of the full impact of the 2014 research excellence framework, its seventh country-wide research assessment exercise, Europe's other research giant has just given the green light to the introduction of its own assessment system. Eight years in the making, Germany's Research Rating (or Forschungsrating) has so far consisted of four subject-level pilots, with evaluations carried out in chemistry, sociology, electrical engineering and British and American studies. On 25 January the German Council of Science and Humanities (the Wissenschaftsrat) approved plans to roll out the system across all fields.
A working group has been tasked with developing a detailed proposal on how the system will be organised. Although a number of questions remain, within a couple of years the system will be implemented across the board, Rainer Lange, head of research at the council, told Times Higher Education. The subcommittee that designed the Research Rating looked at both the UK and the Dutch assessment systems in designing the process, and it opted for a system more like that of the Netherlands. Read more...
17 février 2013

Balancing integrity and the ‘dirty’ world of research

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Mari Elken and Jens Jungblut. One thing you almost never learn in masters or PhD education is how the world of successful project applications really works. In the context of unstable and competitive funding sources and expectations of impact and societal relevance, the nature of academic work is changing. New job profiles emerge, with academics being expected to be more entrepreneurial, project management becoming a central skill and policy relevance emerging as a key funding criterion. While policy relevance is expected, linkage between research and policy – the so-called research-policy nexus – is not always straightforward or without contestation. This raises questions about the appropriate skills and competences for the next generation of researchers, who have to operate at the intersection between traditional academic work, policy advice and contract research. Read more...
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