Le rapport du médiateur de Pôle emploi demande à l’institution de respecter la loi
Sur le blog de Michel Abhervé pour Alternatives économiques.Le 29 août dernier nous écrivions dans ce blog, à propos du rapport du premier médiateur de Pôle, Benoît Génuini, un article intitulé Et si Pôle emploi devenait une structure respectant le droit?Cet article comportait la phrase suivante “Deux ans et demi après que ce rapport ait été rendu public, rien n’a changé, si ce n’est l’accentuation de la tendance des responsables de Pôle emploi à fixer eux-même des règles, fut-ce au mépris de la loi. C’est le cas, entre autres, de la radiation pour absence à rendez-vous téléphonique, alors que les textes précisent bien que cette radiation est fondée sur l’absence à une convocation, et que la convocation suppose de demander de faire venir à soi (voir à ce sujet les nombreux cas traités par le site Recours radiations), de la pratique généralisée de l’effet rétroactif de la suspension au moment de l’absence et non à celui de la notification, contraire à toute règle de droit, sujet sur lequel le médiateur, Jean-Louis Walter, a vainement demandé que les pratiques changent (voir Vers la fin de la rétroactivité de la radiation des demandeurs d’emploi ?), ou aux pratiques de reprise d’indus ne respectant pas le principe de la quotité insaisissable, pourtant déterminé avec précision par la loi, dont Le Canard enchainé du 8 août s’est fait écho, dans un article intitulé “Pôle emploi passe la tondeuse sur les chômeurs”. Suite de l'article...
The blog of Michael Abhervé for Economic Alternatives. On August 29 we wrote in this blog about the report of the first Ombudsman Pole, Benedict Genuini an article entitled if employment center became a structure respecting the rights? This article included the following sentence "Two and a half years after the report was released, nothing has changed, except the accentuation of the trend leaders employment center to set their own rules, it was in violation of the law. More...Emplois d’avenir: la première étape du soutien du CNFPT est en place
Sur le blog de Michel Abhervé pour Alternatives économiques. Dans la mise en place du programme des emplois d’avenir, la formation joue un rôle déterminant pour la réussite.Nous avons suivi ma mise en place de ce volet pour les jeunes employés dans les collectivité territoriales (voir Formation des emplois d’avenir: des moyens mobilisés davantage dans l’ESS que dans le public et Le CNFPT ne veut pas payer la formation certifiante ou qualifiante des emplois d’avenirs des collectivités territoriales) et nous nous félicitons que la première étape du dispositif soit en place, et présentée sur son site.
Elle comprend “une formation d’adaptation des emplois d’avenir (FAEA) à la fonction publique territoriale. D’une durée de 2 jours, elle est dispensée à tous les bénéficiaires des emplois d’avenir. Elle a pour objectif de leur permettre de se repérer dans l’environnement territorial, d’inscrire leur parcours dans un projet territorial et de leur fournir les outils pour situer leur rôle en tant qu’acteur du service public local; identifier les droits et les obligations d’un agent de service public; connaître le fonctionnement d’une collectivité territoriale; s’approprier les règles communes de santé et de sécurité au travail.”
An blag Michael Abhervé do Roghanna Eacnamaíoch. I gcur i bhfeidhm an chláir fostaíochta amach anseo, drámaí oiliúint ról ríthábhachtach ag do rath. Lean muid ar mo chur i bhfeidhm an chomhpháirt d'fhostaithe óga sa phobal teorann (féach post Oiliúna sa todhchaí: níos mó acmhainní shlógadh i CSE san earnáil phoiblí agus ní bheidh an CNFPT íoc as oiliúint nó á dheimhniú cáilitheacha todhchaí fostaíochta na n-údarás áitiúla) agus tá áthas orainn go bhfuil an chéad chéim an gléas i bhfeidhm, agus cuireadh i láthair ar a láithreán gréasáin. Níos mó...Community Colleges Helping to Meet STEM Demand
By R A Johnston. Adults faced with retraining for careers, especially in the critical areas of science, technology, engineering and math, are more frequently heading to community colleges, writes Cherise Lesesne in Diverse. These two-year degree programs are sought not only by high school graduates, but also by many who already have university credits and degrees.
It’s the result of a far-thinking design approach by the community colleges, Lesesne explains. Many of them have designed practical career-training programs that quickly lead students into proficiency with tech skills they need for work. Although they offer general humanities courses, most community colleges have specialized in medical, industrial and other engineering-related programs. Called STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) programs, these certificate courses are drawing far beyond the community college’s usual base of students. Read more...
Gallup, Lumina Reveal Public Attitudes on Higher Education
By R A Johnston. Do Americans think that education beyond high school is vitally important, and what barriers hold some of them back from having post-secondary degrees and certificates? The Indiana-based Lumina Foundation teamed up with Gallup to ask 1,001 Americans these and other questions. The poll was released February 5, reports the Fort Mill Times, and it shows that Americans take higher education seriously.The poll of adults over 18, including houses with landlines and cell-only households, showed that no more than 3% are willing to say that education past high school is not important for financial security. Those without any education past high school often think about trying to go back for more certification, even in later life. Read more...
How open courses are changing the modern university
By Anita Singh and Howard Adelman. Traditional universities will have to respond to new challenges. In June 2012, University of Virginia President Teresa Sullivan was unceremoniously fired. According to university board members, Sullivan's inadequate response to initiatives underway in MIT, Stanford and Harvard to online education prompted the drastic action. While her reinstatement was instigated by protesting students, administrators and faculty, and "(S)oon after her reinstatement, the university announced a partnership with Coursera, a for-profit online initiative."University presidents fired for not being sufficiently dynamic in initiating online education! What is happening? Does such an event portend a vast shift from bricks-and-mortar to the online realm? Ira Basen, in a recent CBC special, pointed out that the current postsecondary structure is too expensive, too restrictive, and too inaccessible for the needs of the contemporary world and its potential students. Recent decisions of high-profile universities to offer online classes through Coursera or Harvard and MIT’s OpenCourse project, customarily with recognition for completion but not accreditation, are replies to that critique. The response has been overwhelming. In a little more than a year, massive open online courses (also known as MOOCs) have been accessed by over 100 million people. Read more...
Balancing act for higher education
For a provincial government desperate to manage expectations, the grim accounting now being conducted at Alberta's post-secondary institutions must be a cheering development.But even as universities and colleges brace for a cash crunch looming in the provincial budget March 7, the Redford government should take care to remember the genuine value of the learning investment. The future payoff is even more compelling at a time when all provinces are anxious to educate and retain their young people to meet the growing shortage of skilled workers.
The premier and her cabinet are locked within a box, no question, and if it's not exactly one of their own making it is still one they have helped fortify in accordance with the prior practice of earlier Tory regimes. Now that the chickens have come home to roost and the province is struggling with sharply reduced resource revenues and a rapidly growing demand for services, something clearly will have to give. Read more...
University budget cuts will hamper educator training
The conflict stems from a perceived or potential threat to access to education for all, which has been a guiding principle of Quebec higher education ever since it was set down 50 years ago in the Parent report. Beyond the debates and number-crunching exercises to define the appropriate dollar cost of tuition fees, there is a consensus that education remains a fundamental societal value for the growth and development of Quebec. Read more...
AUCC welcomes back two member institutions
By Léo Charbonneau. Two institutions have rejoined the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada after absences of differing lengths. The two are St. Paul’s College, located on the campus of the University of Manitoba, and Université du Québec’s Télé-université, or TÉLUQ, a distance-learning institution. St. Paul’s, a Catholic college and home to the Arthur V. Mauro Centre for Peace and Justice, instructs some 1,200 full-time students. TÉLUQ offers more than 400 courses and 75 programs at both the graduate and undergraduate level to 18,000 full- and part-time students. TÉLUQ was a member of AUCC from 1992 until 2005, at which time the Quebec government merged the online university with Université du Québec à Montréal. Read more...
Reforming higher education
Ideally, Ontario’s universities should produce intelligent and resourceful people to able fulfil their lives with accomplishment. Unfortunately, they turn out too many who are semi-literate, unskilled and unable to meet the demands of the job market (and deeply in debt). This by no means applies to the majority, but in moments of candour professors will acknowledge that their classrooms have too many students with no real interest in being there. It’s not because they aren’t capable. Rather, it’s because the university, with its academic and scholarly orientation — especially in the arts and humanities — is not the best place for them if all they are really concerned about is getting a job. Such circumstances are waste of time, talent and money for the person involved, the university and society at large. Read more...