Friday 30 September 2016

INNOTECS - International Network of Technical Schools – 2nd project conference (Valencia)


On 26th October, the 2nd INNOTECS conference will take place in Valencia, Spain.
“How to attract more (young) students in technical studies (and how to fill in the gap between school and company) will be the theme of the conference and FORAVE will be were responsible for the round table “How to meet the rapidly changing demands of the companies?”.


Here is the desk research we did for the conference.



INNOTECS CONFERENCE
VALENCIA, 26th OCTOBER 2016

WORLD CAFE - How to meet the rapidly changing demands of the companies?

Debate Issues

1.   What are the biggest challenges that workers are going to face in the next 20 years?
2.   Are education and vet operators prepared for the future demands of companies?
3.   How can they increase the approach to industry and talk the “same language”?
4.   Which profiles do companies need? How skilled should workers be for industry 4.0?
5.   Which trainers’ profiles do schools need to prepare the new generation working force?
6.   Everything will be connected to everything else. In what way can VET and manufacturing improve their connection?

ABOUT THE TOPIC

The world is changing and the workforce in a very near future will be multi-generational, older,  and  more  highly  polarised.  Businesses are likely  to  retain  a  smaller  core  staff,  with  people  moving  across  organisations  and  projects,  with  the  lower-skilled  experiencing  increasing  insecurity of  employment  and  income.  People are more  likely  to  develop  portfolio  careers  around  hybrid  skills.  Collaborative business models become more important, and businesses demand people with excellent project and risk management skills.
In all countries the implications for skills development are momentous. Many of the jobs that will be generated over the next two decades do not exist today.
The next most significant trends include a greater customer focus and more customer-specific adaptation, efforts to reduce lead times, new forms of marketing and distribution channels (especially in the e-commerce area) and greater energy efficiency across the production operation. Further trends included preventive maintenance, automation of inbound logistics, smart data-gathering and miniaturization.
These additional trends and challenges are closely linked to the issues raised by industry 4.0 and exponential technologies. Digital Industry 4.0 is based on cyber-physical production systems that combine communications, IT, data and physical elements. These systems transform traditional plants into smart factories. Here, machines "talk" to products and other machines, objects deliver decision-critical data, and information is processed and distributed in real time resulting in profound changes to the entire industrial ecosystem.
The talent requirements and number of skilled workers, the digital transformation to industry 4.0 will bring new challenges for many employees.
Creative working processes, such as strategic planning or research and development, will have a greater need for the skills required to identify, introduce and implement the new and innovative business opportunities offered by industry 4.0.
New business models and new models for cooperation constitute the real added value of industry 4.0.  Space for creativity needs to be established. To answer the questions how companies can learn and how change can be managed will be of key importance for senior management.
Digitisation increases also the importance of new technical skills, notably in the case of operating activities and mechanical working processes in production, purchasing and warehousing and logistics. New, process-dependent systems making greater use of technology may prove to be a major challenge for existing employees. In future manufacturing companies will have to pay even greater attention to developing the competencies of their employees and recruiting a digitally sophisticated workforce.

THE IMPLICATIONS OF THESE CHANGES ARE WIDE-RANGING     

  • Employers will need to  take ownership  of  skills  in  their  sectors  and  rise  to  the  challenge   of   international   competition;   develop   career   routes   and   progression pathways  for  young  people  and  those  with  lower  skills  in  particular;  and  collaborate  with  education  and  training  provides  to  ensure  learning  provision  meets  employer needs.
  • Individuals will need to adapt to a changing labour market and patterns of work; take responsibility for investing in and developing their skills; develop both job specific and soft skills, including collaboration and communication; and develop the skills required by employers, including enterprise and management skills.
  • Education and training providers will need to collaborate with employers to  ensure  that  their  offer  meets employer  needs;  invest  in  new  modes  of  learning  and  continually update content; develop content which reflects the role of technology and an   increasingly   interdisciplinary   approach   to   work;   and   provide   more   flexible   opportunities for learning. 
  • Policy makers will need to maximise the public and private markets for skills,  ensuring  that  public  investment  supports  provision  that  meets  employer  needs;  encourage  employers  to  take  ownership  of  skills  and  develop  training  solutions;  support  those  with  lower-level  skills  to  reskill  and  take  opportunities  in  a  changing  labour market; and mitigate local, regional and demographic disparities in access to jobs and skills.
  
WHAT CAN BE DONE

  • Building solid bridges between the world of work and training providers in order to match skills provision to the needs of enterprises
  • Continuous workplace training and lifelong learning enabling workers and enterprises to adjust to an increasingly rapid pace of change
  • Anticipating and building competencies for future needs
  • Sustained dialogue between employers and trainers, coordination across government institutions,   labour market information, employment services and performance reviews are steps to an early identification of skill needs
  •  Ensuring broad access to training opportunities, for women and men, and particularly for those groups facing greater difficulties, in particular youth, lower skilled workers, workers with disabilities, rural communities
  • Benefits from adequate investment in good-quality education and skills
  • A good skills development system will be able to: anticipate skill needs; engage employers and workers in decisions about training  provision,  including  in  specific  sectors; maintain the quality and relevance of training; make training accessible to all sectors of society
  • To keep training relevant, institutional and financial arrangements must build solid bridges between the world of learning and the world of work. Bringing together business and labour, government and training providers, at the local, industry and national levels, is an effective means of securing the relevance of training to the changing needs of enterprises and labour markets.
  • Maintaining a close connection between training policies and employment policies creates an effective bridge between the worlds of learning and of work

Manuela Guimarães I Teresa Santos
Lousado, 30 September 2016

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