2019
DOI: 10.1787/9789264313835-en
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OECD Skills Strategy 2019

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Cited by 48 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, the pedagogical activities in higher institutions like vocational education include learning occupational skills in workplaces through work simulation, internship, and job training that replicate written and oral communication tasks that they will encounter in the office. Such simulations will bring benefits to the students, such as open access to occupation for individuals as they graduate, develop new skills and productivity, and increase efficiency in skills development (OECD, 2019). Encouraging the students to master the necessary skills for the industry will help to reduce the gap between the expectations of the stakeholders or the needs of the industry and the qualifications of the graduates.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, the pedagogical activities in higher institutions like vocational education include learning occupational skills in workplaces through work simulation, internship, and job training that replicate written and oral communication tasks that they will encounter in the office. Such simulations will bring benefits to the students, such as open access to occupation for individuals as they graduate, develop new skills and productivity, and increase efficiency in skills development (OECD, 2019). Encouraging the students to master the necessary skills for the industry will help to reduce the gap between the expectations of the stakeholders or the needs of the industry and the qualifications of the graduates.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…have been recognized and highly valued as critical "human" skills in the 21st century. This may suggest that on the one hand, there is an emerging need to combine skills across domains in reshaping more "integrated" sustainability competencies while acknowledging and keeping core featured skills of different educational backgrounds in higher education in order to prepare "future-ready adults" [71,72] with right skills to meet real "sustainable" in facing the growing skills instability with the wave of new technologies in the fourth industrial revolution, for example, an artistic student should also be competent in technology related skills for successfully finding a corresponding job such as an illustrator or visual designer. On the other hand, it also highlights the complex feedback loops between higher education, sustainability competencies, and market, therefore, despite the evolution needed in higher education, companies and employers are also expected to broaden the workforce by offering more hiring and training opportunities for re-skilling and up-skilling, based on an understanding of sustained value for the business and employees through seeing "workforce as an asset" [73], and in this way, support more efficient and sustainable transformation of skills into socio-economic growth, as well as talents' lifelong well-being by investment in human capital.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The most disadvantaged are least likely to train, with low-skilled adults three times less likely to undertake training than the high-skilled (20% vs 58%). Other groups falling behind include older people, low-wage and temporary workers, and the unemployed (OECD, 2019 [52]). Evidence from the UK Employer Skills Survey shows that across the UK, highly skilled workers are more likely to take part in training than middle-skill and lower skilled workers.…”
Section: Training Provision and Better Business Planning Can Help Redmentioning
confidence: 99%