White Paper
Reference
Assessing the early impact of the apprenticeship levy: Employers' perspective
The UK Government’s apprenticeships reform and the introduction of the apprenticeship levy has meant fundamental shifts to the funding model with new implications for how employers interact with the apprenticeship system. But how have employers responded to these changes since the levy’s rollout in April 2017? Our report, Assessing the early impact of the apprenticeship levy – employers’ perspective, explores employer views and attitudes, their likely reaction to the levy in terms of their investment in apprenticeships, as well as the likely effect on their wider learning and development strategies. For employers considering their own apprenticeship programmes and their engagement with the levy, there is also available as a separate download case studies of three organisations that have taken an innovative approach to addressing their workforce challenges and their top tips for implementation.
Reference
Creating opportunity or entrenching disadvantage?: 5 years on: ACT labour market data update
In October 2014, ACTCOSS and the Women’s Centre for Health Matters collaborated to release a report for Anti-Poverty Week titled Creating Opportunity or Entrenching Disadvantage? which explored ACT labour market data and trends, and the female share for the largest employing industries in the ACT. Now 5 years later, approximately 37,000 people live in low-income households in the ACT, and women are over-represented in Canberra’s low-income households. With the cost of living in the ACT also increasing and Canberra’s overall CPI increasing above the national rate, we have revisited the latest data to determine what changes have occurred in the labour market and how women have fared though the changes compared to men.
Reference
Understanding the experience and perceived impact of the Ready Arrive Work Program
This research engaged students and key stakeholders in order to provide a rich account of the impact of RAW on schools, students, industry, and civic organisations. Central to this is the identification of enablers and barriers to participation in, and success of, RAW. The central questions of the study were: Research Question 1. What do participants report are the impacts of RAW on schools, students, industry and civic organisations? Research Question 2. What are the enablers and barriers of participation in RAW and the perceived success of RAW?
Reference
Bridges to the future: GAP taskforce on youth transitions report
This report summarises the deliberations and proposals of the GAP Taskforce on Youth Transitions - a multidisciplinary stakeholder group established by Global Access Partners (GAP) in 2018 in the context of the NSW Curriculum Review. The group operated as an informal advisory body to Prof Geoff Masters AO and the NSW Education Standards Authority (NESA), and through them to the NSW Minister for Education. The Taskforce was co-funded by GAP and NESA and was chaired by David de Carvalho, Chief Executive Officer of NESA. He left that role in February 2019 but continued to chair the Taskforce.
Reference
Key Indicators on Education, Skills and Employment 2019
Based on data on vocational education, skills, employment and labour market outcomes compiled in 2019, this report provides an overview of trends and developments in ETF partner countries and aims to raise awareness on the use of indicators to drive the policy cycle.
Reference
The enterprise guide to closing the skills gap: Strategies for building and maintaining a skilled workforce
This report provides an overview of the changing skills needed in today's workforce and what to do to get them. Rhe report provides a set of key recommendations that leverage the common principles of these tactics as a foundation: personalization at scale, increased transparency, and leveraging the ecosystem. These recommendations leverage artificial intelligence (AI) to assist organizations in closing skills-related gaps.
Reference
Skills and smart specialisation: The role of vocational education and training in smart specialisation strategies
The Smart Specialisation approach has been part of EU regional innovation policy since 2010 and yet the role of skills and vocational education and training in implementing Smart Specialisation Strategies has only recently attracted attention. Despite being raised in earlier policy documents, it was the 2017 Communication on Strengthening Innovation in Europe's Regions, drawing on experience of implementing smartspecialisation in practice, which illustrated its significance for regional innovation policy. In the proposals for Cohesion Policy post 2020, education and skills for innovation are important priorities. Therefore, this technical report is timely since it explores trends in Vocational Education and Training (VET), looks at where it has contributed to Smart Specialisation in specific cases, and highlights elements to consider in regional strategies.
Reference
Promoting youth employment in fragile settings
This technical note underscores the value of employment-based interventions in situations of fragility, for youth and the broader society. The note presents relevant policy frameworks, as well as operational approaches and tools applied in addressing the need of young women and men exposed to the consequences of conflicts and natural disasters. Drawing on ILO knowledge and country experiences, it offers insights for policy advice and programme making.
Reference
Meet the millions of young adults who are out of work: Local profiles of jobless young adults and strategies to connect them to employment
Helping young people prepare to engage in work and life as productive adults is a central challenge for any society. In theory, the path to employment providing financial security in adulthood is simple: finish high school, enroll in and complete college or training that is affordable and a good fit, gain some work experience along the way, and launch a career. But given that 17 per cent of young adults ages 18 to 24 are out of work in mid to large cities in the U.S., totaling 2.3 million young people, this path does not appear to work equally well for all, particularly in light of the effects of the Great Recession and the declining rates of employment among teens and young adults since about 2000. Though millions of young Americans are out of work, they are not monolithic. We used cluster analysis to segment out-of-work young adults into five groups, represented by personas, likely to benefit from similar types of employment and educational assistance. We grouped young people together based on similarities in their work history, educational attainment, school enrollment, English language proficiency, family status, and other characteristics. Lastly, the report provides recommendations for state, local, civic, and institutional leaders to help all young people successfully navigate the transition into the labor market.