Vocational education beyond skill formation: vet between civic, industrial and market tensions
In: Studies in vocational and continuing education vol. 15
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In: Studies in vocational and continuing education vol. 15
In: International journal for research in vocational education and training: IJRVET, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 300-333
ISSN: 2197-8646
Purpose: Promoting the labour integration of people with functional diversity is a key element to achieve their social inclusion. This meta-analysis aims to examine the effectiveness of experimental programs in developing employable skills for people with disabilities. Methods: Literature searches up to June 2019 were conducted in four databases (Web of Science, Scopus, PsycINFO and ERIC). Studies that met the following criteria were selected: (1) The program should develop employable skills; (2) the participants should be people with functional diversity; (3) the study should have a design with an experimental group and a control group as well as pretest and posttest measurements; (4) the study had to provide enough data to calculate the effect sizes; and (5) the study had to be written in English or Spanish. 67 independent studies met the selection criteria, among 14 articles published between 1998 and 2019. Results: The results revealed mean effect sizes in favour of the experimental group for the set of all studies according to data reported by people with functional diversity, as well as according their relatives and teachers. The two dimensions of the programs with a significant effect size in favour of the experimental group were interview skills and career planning. Furthermore, it was found that the programs showed a higher degree of effectiveness in groups formed only by people with intellectual disabilities, with a lower educational level, whose duration ranged from six to twelve months. This was particularly the case with participants from Spain and Australia. Conclusion: Promoting the labour insertion of people with disability is a key element to achieve their social inclusion. Programs that support and develop employability and that are conducted upon experimental conditions do have a positive impact upon young people with functional diversity. Upon the results, we discuss practical implications for integrating disabled persons into the labour market.
In: International journal for research in vocational education and training: IJRVET, Band 2, Heft 3, S. 170-181
ISSN: 2197-8646
Our contribution attempts to review the development of the field of didactics in Spain in the past 35 years and its contribution to the development and improvement of vocational education and training. We intend to show that the concern of didactics is an issue of great concern (and dispute) in Southern Europe, for which we will use Spain as an example.
We will particularly analyse from a didactical approach (taking didactics as a normative applied discipline well established in academia) the possibilities that a traditionally school-based discipline has to improve the development of vocational education practice in and out of schools, for young and adult people, in terms of pedagogical innovation.
In: Europäische Zeitschrift für Berufsbildung, Heft 42/43, S. 98-111
ISSN: 1977-0243
Our contribution attempts to review basic vocational education programmes in Spain over the past 25 years. We intend to compare the evolution of these programmes in terms of conception and conditions of delivery in order to find out how different they are as skill-formation and remedial systems, as well as analysing how different political views have an impact upon such provision. We will focus on the current programmes in two regions in Spain where tourism is the main economic strength and source of employment. The authors have been working on several research projects investigating these issues since the late 1990s and we are currently working on two of them. (DIPF/Orig.)
BASE
In: International journal for research in vocational education and training: IJRVET, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 137-151
ISSN: 2197-8646
Our contribution attempts to review basic vocational education programmes
in Spain over the past 25 years. We intend to compare the evolution of
these programmes in terms of conception and conditions of delivery in order to
find out how different they are as skill-formation and remedial systems, as well as
analysing how different political views have an impact upon such provision. We
will focus on the current programmes in two regions in Spain where tourism is the
main economic strength and source of employment. The authors have been working
on several research projects investigating these issues since the late 1990s and
we are currently working on two of them.