Raadsconclusies over de carrièremogelijkheden van afgestudeerden in de EU (en)
COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION
Council conclusions on the employability of graduates from education and training
3164th EDUCATION, YOUTH, CULTURE and SPORT Council meeting Brussels, 10 and 11 May 2012
The Council adopted the following conclusions:
"THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION, HAVING REGARD TO
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-The Council conclusions of 12 May 2009 on a strategic framework for European cooperation in education and training ("ET 2020")1, which given the importance of enhancing employability through education and training in order to meet current and future labour market challenges invited the Commission to present a proposal for a possible European benchmark in this area
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-The conclusions of the Council and of the Representatives of the Governments of the Member States, meeting within the Council, of 18 November 2010 on the priorities for enhanced European cooperation in vocational education and training for the period 2011-2020 , which emphasised that countries should promote partnerships between education and training providers, social partners and other relevant stakeholders in order to ensure a better transfer of information on labour market needs and to provide a better match between those needs and the development of knowledge, skills and competences
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OJC 119, 28.5.2009, pp. 2-10. OJC 324, 1.12.2010, pp. 5-15
The Council conclusions of 14 February 2011 on the role of education and training in the implementation of the Europe 2020 Strategy3, which stressed the importance for enhancing employability of the transition towards learning outcomes-based qualification systems and the greater validation of skills and competences acquired in non-formal and informal contexts
The Europe 2020 flagship initiative "An agenda for new skills andjobs: a European contribution towards full employment", which is aimed at enhancing the performance of education and training systems and seeking to equip young people with the relevant skills and competences for labour market needs
The Council conclusions of 17 June 2011 on promoting youth employment to achieve the Europe 2020 objectives4, which stressed that the European Social Fund has an important role to play in improving the employment prospects and skills levels of young people and implementing policies at the national, regional and local level in order to increase the labour market access and employability of young people
The Council conclusions of 28 November 2011 on the modernisation of higher education5, which called for efforts to strengthen links between higher education institutions, employers and labour market institutions in order to take greater account of labour market needs in study programmes, to improve the match between skills and jobs, and to develop active labour market policies aimed at promoting graduate employment
The 2012 Annual Growth Survey6, which calls on Member States to support in particular the employment of young people, including by promoting quality apprenticeships and traineeship contracts and by adapting education and training systems to reflect labour market conditions and skills demands
OJC 70, 4.3.2011, pp. 1-3.
OJ C 372, 20.12.2011, pp. 36-41. + ADD 1,2 and 3
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-The Statement of the Members of the European Council of 30 January 20127, which calls for efforts to stimulate employment, especially for young people, including by promoting their first work experience and their participation in the labour market, with the aim of ensuring that within a few months of leaving school young people receive a good quality offer of employment, continued education, an apprenticeship, or a traineeship
RECALLING THAT
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-Empowering young Europeans to acquire the knowledge, skills and competences needed to ensure a smooth transition to the EU labour market and to further develop their career prospects is more essential than ever, as the number of young job seekers continues to rise steeply
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-The current economic crisis accentuates the importance of the education to work transition. Ensuring that young people leave education and training with the best possible support to obtain their first job is critical. Young people who face unemployment or a slow transition may experience long-term adverse effects in terms of future labour market success, earnings or family formation. This may in turn jeopardise public and private investment in their education and training, which results in a loss for society as a whole. This is particularly true in the context of demographic challenges, which put added pressure on Europe's increasingly scarce young people to integrate quickly and effectively into the labour market
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-Adding a benchmark8 on the share of employed graduates9 which focuses on the transition from education and training into the labour market would allow policy exchanges to be taken up within the "ET 2020" framework on measures to enhance the employability of graduates
SN 5/12
As outlined in the 2009 strategic framework for European cooperation in education and training, this is a reference level of European average performance which is not to be considered as a concrete target for each country to reach, but rather as a collective target which Member States are invited to contribute to achieving (OJ C 119, 28.5.2009, p. 7). For the purpose of this text, the term "graduate" refers to any person who has left education and training with at least upper-secondary or post-secondary, non-tertiary qualifications (ISCED 3 to ISCED 4, excluding ISCED 3 C short), or with tertiary qualifications (ISCED 5 and 6)
TAKING INTO ACCOUNT THAT
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-The share of employed graduates - that is to say, the share of the employed population aged between 20 and 34 years old who graduated 1, 2 or 3 years before the reference year and who are not currently enrolled in any further education or training activity - fell by almost 4.5 percentage points between 2008 (81%) and 2010 (76.5%)
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-Sufficient data are already available to allow monitoring of the employability of graduates from education and training, without creating additional administrative burdens and costs for either Member States or Eurostat.10
ACKNOWLEDGES THAT
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-Employability - that is, the combination of factors which enable individuals to progress towards or enter employment, to stay in employment and to progress during their career - is a complex concept, involving not only each individual's characteristics, skills, attitudes and motivation, but also other external factors which lie beyond the scope of education and training policy, such as labour market regulations, demography, the structure of the economy and the overall economic situation
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-Strengthening employability is a policy concern for all public authorities, including those responsible for education and training and for employment. At European level, it is a matter of relevance to the Europe 2020 strategy and the "ET 2020" framework
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-Education and training's support for the employability of young people is partly covered by the relevant Europe 2020 headline targets and existing "ET 2020" benchmarks, such as those on tertiary educational attainment, early leavers from education and training, adult participation in lifelong learning and low-achievers in reading, mathematics and science
Towards a Benchmark on the Contribution of Education and Training to Employability: (Methodological note EUR 24616 2011)
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-The transition from education and training to employment is not yet addressed, however, within the current monitoring framework. In this phase, the contribution of education and training systems to the employability of graduates could for instance be made through career guidance and counselling, through stronger links between education and training institutions and relevant stakeholders, through the alignment of curricula with labour market needs, through strengthening entrepreneurship education, through placements in companies, through more transparent information on learning outcomes and through more responsive education and training policies which reflect labour market skills needs, and through encouraging all young people to pursue their studies beyond general upper-secondary education. Attention should also be paid to the employability of young people with special needs on the labour market
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-The development of a European benchmark on the share of employed graduates would help to identify education and training policies which improve the transition between education and training and work and help to boost employment success. A European benchmark measuring the share of employed graduates, accompanied by relevant analysis on the qualitative aspects such as the match between the supply of knowledge, skills and competences and the occupation obtained up to three years after graduation, would also help to enhance European cooperation on policies in the field of education and training which focus on the transition from education and training to work. It would help to monitor the progress of Member States towards the increased employability of graduates, as well as to identify examples of good practice and support the development of peer-learning initiatives
INVITES THE MEMBER STATES,
while taking account of the different situations in individual Member States,
(1) To adopt measures at national level which are aimed at increasing the employability of
graduates leaving the education and training system, with a view to achieving the European benchmark as outlined in the Annex hereto, whilst also promoting the match between educational attainment and occupation
(2) On the basis of the available sources and tools, to monitor the share of employed graduates from education and training, with a view to enhancing the evidence base for policy development on the interface between education and training on the one hand and work on the other hand, as outlined in the Annex
(3) To promote the implementation and use of EU programmes, tools and frameworks designed to support employability, mobility and lifelong learning, including Europass, Youthpass, EQF, ECTS, EC VET and EQAVET
(4) To enhance cooperation between education and training institutions and relevant stakeholders in the world of work at local, regional and national level, with a view to promoting apprenticeships, internships and placements in companies during the earliest phase of transition from education and training to the labour market
INVITES THE COMMISSION TO
(1) Examine, in particular through the annual Education and Training Monitor and the Joint
Report on the implementation of the "ET2020" strategic framework, the degree to which the European benchmark is being achieved
The Education and Training Monitor will also provide information on the European benchmark as regards early school leavers, although this target group is not included in the set objective
(2) Enhance European cooperation on policy development in the field of education and training for employability through the analysis and monitoring of such education and training, including by:
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-examining the specific impact of education and training policies on the transition from education and training to work;
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-analysing the quality of first jobs by matching educational attainment and job content, including the match between the supply of knowledge, skills and competences and the occupation pursued during the three first years on the labour market
(3) Cooperate closely with other relevant international institutions, such as the ILO, OECD and UNESCO, in order to exchange analyses and expertise on the transition of graduates to the labour market
AND INVITES THE MEMBER STATES AND THE COMMISSION TO
(1) Collect qualitative information and examples of good practice aimed at complementing the quantitative monitoring and enhancing the foundation for evidence-based policy making, using mainly existing sources, including the "ET2020" reporting arrangements
(2) Identify examples of good practice in the Member States concerning the smooth transition from education and training to work by setting up an expert group on the transition of graduates from education and training to the labour market, thereby contributing to the "ET2020" priorities. The group should consist of national experts appointed by the Member States and experts representing the relevant social partners appointed by the Commission, and should, with due regard to subsidiarity: