In the case of Mexico, an experience
was begun in 1995 by the Occupational Competency Standardisation and Certification Council
(CONOCER), the most important initiative with the greatest scope in the field of
occupational competencies in the region. It was an answer to interest on the part of the
Government in achieving the participation, among other mechanisms, of the players, by
stimulating demand with the aim of supporting the design and development of training based
on competency standards and their certification.
The occupational competency system which
has been applied includes the following main components:
To define technical occupational
competency standards by branch of activity or occupational group, to be implemented by the
social partners with governmental support.
To establish mechanisms for
evaluation, verification and certification of knowledge, abilities and skills of
individuals, regardless of the way in which they have been acquired, providing they meet
technical competency standards.
To transform the supply of training
into a flexible modular system based on competency standards in order that individuals may
move among the modules according to their needs.
To create stimuli to demand, in
order to promote the new system among the population and firms, seeking an equitable
distribution of training and certification opportunities, and also catering to the needs
of the disadvantaged population.
Following the creation of a system of
national coverage, greater stress is laid on the definition of standards for the more
general functions in the different economic branches, technological languages and
occupational areas.
Finally, this initiative is conceived from
the standpoint of finding a valid alternative to link the different types of education and
training with the countrys employment demands. The challenge is to approach the
modernisation of educational and training -for- labour systems, not only so that they
respond to the exigencies of adaptation to the new conditions of the economy and
technology, but particularly to cater to the need to make education and training available
to all sectors of the population, with suitable and relevant content and with the quality
required by the labour market. At present there are 45 Labour Competency Standardisation
Committees operating in Mexico, 57 pilot projects are being carried out in firms of
different sectors of economic activity to foster skill development and training of
individuals, and seven certifying bodies and nine Evaluation Centres have been accredited.
On 13 December last, the first 120 Labour Competency Certificates were distributed.
The Directing Board of the INA of Costa
Rica decided in 1997 to include the standardisation and certification of occupational
skills in its institutional policy. To that end, its started a project for applying the
competencies approach in the Tourism sector, with technical assistance provided by the ILO
International Training Centre at Turin.
Upon completion of the scheme the INA has
modular vocational training programmes in the catering and lodging subsectors for the
following occupations: Hotel Cooks Assistant, Hotel Cook, Receptionist, Waiter and
Bartender. The INA devised a methodological process for the development of the relevant
skills standards.
To apply the modular system, the following
criteria were followed: flexibility, by offering several certifiable occupational outlets;
adaptability, multi-functionality, integrity, dynamism and compliance with the paradigm
"Education/training for Productive work".
The INA has also laid down methodological
procedures for the development of skills standards in general and the modularisation of
such standards; for the curricular design of modular units and training modules. It has
also established a procedure for labour certification on the basis of occupational skills.
The Costa Rican Institute has further
implemented a Teachers Training Project based on occupational competency standards.
This scheme had the following aim:
"Formulating modular training programmes for the training of instructors, on the
basis of occupational competencies, for use at the INA itself and at the National
Vocational Education System (Spanish acronym: SNFP)".
For that purpose, an educators job
profile was defined and validated; relevant occupational standards were established and
modular programmes were devised for the training of teachers for the INA and the SNFP.
Some of the reasons for this initiative
were:
a) There is a present a great shortage of
instructors trained in the design and delivery of Vocational Training programmes.
b) There is no institution in the country
to train educators with the job profile required.
c) The INA, governing body of the National
Vocational Education System, is in charge of training instructors in accordance with
current demands and requirements of the labour market.
d) Instructors training
programmes have to take into account current changes in educational technology, in
particular those regarding training based on occupational skills
e) Experience has shown that the
teaching-learning process requires educators with the necessary skills to ensure adequate
training.
In Uruguay, the National Employment
Bureau (DINAE), with the co-operation of the IDB, is carrying out a project to study,
design and prepare the implementation of a standardisation, training and certification
system in occupational competencies. To do so, the project is planning to establish a
single register of training bodies and is working on four large areas: a comparative
survey of competency systems developed in other countries in order to determine whether
they can be implemented in Uruguay; information and training activities involving all the
players in society; development of pilot experiences of competency standardisation in
different economic sectors; design of a technical proposal and possible strategies for the
implementation of a National Competencies System.
Moreover, in the same country, an
exhaustive educational reform has been under way since 1995, structured on the coordinates
of a search for equity and quality upgrading. In vocational-technical education, the
reform proposes to achieve coherent interconnected and high quality technical and
technological education, which, as well as attending to its specific tasks (to provide
efficient and multivalent training to co-operate with the transformation of productive
structures and improve the living conditions of workers), dovetails with and complements
Secondary Education in an effort to provide the population with thourough basic and
mid-level education. With this aim, the Technical-Vocational Education Council
(CETP-UTU) is restructuring and re-formulating the education it supplies, the main
novelties being the implementation of the Basic Technological Cycle and the Technological
Secondary School Certificate. The former is divided into two areas: agricultural and
technical, and it proposes to internalise technological culture in adolescents and develop
competencies on which a later and complementary, broader and more modern, vocational
option may be based. The technological secondary school curricula, three years in
duration, with the double aim of being an instance of final mid-level education and
granting a Technical Assistant certificate, are designed to be the intellectual, technical
and manual ability base providing interdisciplinary and cross-sectional content and
approaches, around an organising core or nucleus responding to the main fields of
development of the national economy and structured around occupational families. Thus, in
1997, the following disciplines were implemented: Industrial and Basic Chemistry,
Thermodynamics, Data Processing and Maintenance, Administration and Services, and
Agricultural Technology. The secondary school certificates make possible either entry into
university or continuation of technical specialisation studies, in the CETP itself,
seeking thus to attend to the training of mid-level and higher technicians according to
the training demands of the productive sectors.
The aims of this reform are very explicit
regarding developing in young people a solid general education, well grounded in science
and technology and with the knowledge, abilities and skills which will allow them to be
flexible and adapt quickly to change and to life-long learning. The starting point is a
conception of Uruguay as a small country in the process of development and inserted in a
world subject to constant economic, scientific and technological change. The belief is
that the educational challenge involves preparing its human resources and its economy for
a life of uncertainty. It is thus believed that the symbolic languages to be grasped
thouroughly go beyond the capacity to express oneself and communicate orally and in
writing, and include computer science, telematics, foreign languages and critical
evaluation of audiovisual messages. Also indispensable are a mastery of scientific methods
and knowledge in order to understand, interpret and handle natural and social phenomena;
acquirement of mathematical competencies to acquire methodology and mastery of strategies
for identifying problems and solving them; and a change in socio-historical competencies
from the standpoint that cultural boundaries and world geography are becoming imprecise
and satellite communications modify information-handling radically. And, last but not
least, it is necessary to acquire a technological culture that facilitates the integration
of youth into the world of production and labour and their understanding of its technical
and social dimensions.
Taking as a basis SENAIs Mission,
i.e. "Contributing to the strengthening of industry and to the full and
sustainable development of the country, promoting education for work and civic
responsibility, technical and technological assistance, production and the dissemination
of knowledge, adaptation and circulation of technology", and the Institutes
Vision of its own future, namely that "by 2010 SENAI is destined to play a
leading role as internationally recognised. technologically renewed occupational training
body, managed according to results" its Strategic Plan for the 2000-2010
period establishes the following guidelines:
Systemic action
Action upon productive chains
Improved management
Market oriented
Social responsibility
Sustainability
The Action Plan that accompanies and
enlarges upon the previous document consists of 34 processes and 49 projects that aim at
the following objectives, among others:
Objective 1: expanding SENAI
participation in the vocational education market, to meet the needs both of traditional
segments and technologically advanced ones.
Among activities foreseen in connection
with this objective are: reviewing and updating curricula and programmes; promoting 25 new
CEMEP certifications; training 150 technicians to evaluate 1,500 students in a
"Knowledge Olympiad", setting up an occupational information service;
implementing a national distance education programme with 13 courses running up till late
2002; introducing a follow-up system of SENAI graduates, and monitoring of former trainees
at two Regional Departments.
Objective 3: Offering proactive
attention to customers in the national territory, through co-ordinated, standardised and
personalised services.
Activities contemplated under this
rubric include: developing an integral system of market information based on a survey of
20,000 firms and enterprises; training 30 market agents in Regional Departments;
introducing a comprehensive system for the exchange of information through
"Infovía", with the participation of 15 Regional Departments; promoting
personnel development in enterprises of national scope.
Objective 4: Looking after the demands
of productive chains in a systemic, overall manner.
Disseminating and supporting the APPCC
system in the different segments of the food production chain among 3,000 firms, 300 of
which are in the export business; drafting 4 small thesauri and 4 glossaries a year to
facilitate data retrieval from productive chains; preparing a half-yearly report on the
evaluation of focal scenarios for previously studied productive chains; developing 3
business plans for productive chains; supporting the implementation of 3 projects of
overall attention to productive chains every year; sponsoring the conclusion of 3
co-operation agreements a year for technological development, favouring technologically
updated services.
Objective 6: Expanding SENAI action with
micro and small enterprises.
Forging links with IEL and SEBRAE to
look after firms of this kind; developing SENAI action strategies for the different types
of incubators and technical development schemes; helping 200 small industrial firms to
modernise their management models.
Objective 10: achieving excellence in
institutional performance in line with accepted practices of quality management.
Mapping and optimising procedures,
systematising the management model of the National Department; maintaining ISO 9001:94
standard for the National Department and making ready for ISO 9001:2000; introducing a
system of strategic indicators of SENAI performance; adopting State SGPE in all Regional
Departments by December 2002 and training 250 new users; consolidating and expanding
occupational certification by setting up at least one sectoral committee in every Regional
Department.
In Brazil, with the opening up of
the international market, the demands for higher product quality levels have increased
and, therefore, for worker qualifications. The Vocational Training and Development
Secretariat (SEFOR) of the Ministry of Labour, jointly with the ILO, implement a
project for the design of a certification system. The variety of the supply of training
and the interaction of multiple players on a stage in which training is being carried out
not only within the framework of an "S system" (SENAC, SENAI, SENAR, SENAT)
institutional base but also through a large amount of other private institutions linked to
communities or sectors, generate an environment in which occupational certification can
provide transparency and facilitate the mobility of workers and the improvement of the
quality of training.
The proposal for the system is considering
the multiple experiences in the area of vocational training which exist and are operating
from nongovernmental organisations, unions and the "S system." The introduction
of the occupational competency approach is one of the critical aspects of the possible
proposal; in that regard different international models have been analysed and experiences
in Brazilian firms have also been identified and publicised.
The project has its base in a consulting
group in which representatives of the Government (SEFOR and the Technological Mid-level
Education Secretariat - SEMTEC), of workers (CUT, Fuerza Sindical, CGT), of the SENAI and
of the National Confederation of Industry (CNI) participate.
This group, supported by external
consultants and through the organisation of various workshops to analyse national and
international experiences, is already studying a proposed certification scheme. It is
expected that the proposal will be completed this year and, at the same time, some pilot
experiences will be developed and other existing experiences will be documented before
formulating a final design.
A special feature of this experience arises
from the participation of SEMTEC, in an approach to the mid-level technical education and
vocational education proposals. The framework created by the new Law on Basic Guidelines
for Education enabled SEMTEC to initiate work regarding certification and the introduction
of the competencies approach. The aims from the standpoint of education and of labour have
much in common and joint action is making possible their alignment.
Another example of integration between the
vocational training system and the higher education system is to be found in Brazil, with
the creation, in 1997, of the Textile Industrial Engineering Course, through the Chemical
and Textile Industry Technology Centre (CETIQT) of the SENAI of Rio de Janeiro. This
innovative offer aims to train professionals specialised and skilled for the rapid
development of knowledge, for working in multidisciplinary teams and for exercising
leadership focused as enterprising and management action, as well as for perceiving the
importance of environmental control and for understanding organizations and business.
The course added to its curriculum some
novel aspects: management, environment, quality, humanities, technical standards, safety,
sociology, politics and legislation. Its creation seeks to meet the aspirations of textile
line employers: from the rural producer to the manufacturers and distributors, who seek to
modernise and increase productivity and competitiveness in the sector in the internal and
external markets.
A Graphics Technology course was added, in
1998, to the Textile Industrial Engineering Course. Through the SENAI "Theobaldo de
Nigris" School, in Sao Paulo, this course, also a pioneer endeavour in Brazil, is to
train professionals by solid development of their scientific and technological skills
which will allow them to take part in the management of production, administration and
business in the graphics area. Lasting three years and with a workload of 3,200 hours, the
project was based on European and North American models for training graphics engineers.
Along these same lines, the SENAI is preparing to launch new higher courses in the
footwear, paper and food areas.
In Honduras, the Programme of
Education for Labour (POCET) is a Central American example of this alignment between the
regular educational systems, and especially adult education and training as life-long
education. It is one of the first and richest experiences of integration between
traditions among which historically there was little linkage and, at the same time, an
experience of dialogue of those traditions with the new debates and paradigms that have
involved cross-sectionally the spheres of education and vocational training, in which the
new ideas regarding life-long education and training should be specially highlighted. In
this case the Ministry of Public Education of Honduras and the National Vocational
Training Institute (INFOP) have acted in an integrated manner, at the same time
incorporating methodological approaches which are usually only to be found among
nongovernmental organisations.
In this regard, the POCET programme is a
central reference point for a whole tradition established around the principles of adult
education, with its assistance-providing cast and its orientation towards literacy. POCET
signalled the way towards integration of the contributions made at the time by all those
linked to various forms of popular education with other currents -such as vocational
training- with long experience in the field of education for productive labour. The latter
currents are also deeply involved in profound debates arising both from the emergence of
new production and labour paradigms and the employment market changes and from the
persistence of groups and sectors that are left out.
Centro Interamericano para
el Desarrollo del Conocimiento en la Formación Profesional (OIT/Cinterfor)
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