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How traineeships assist social inclusion

How traineeships assist social inclusion. Erica Smith University of Ballarat Note: Paper has just been published in the English journal ‘Education + Training’. What’s social inclusion?. A relatively new term to Australia (but not a new concept);

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How traineeships assist social inclusion

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  1. How traineeships assist social inclusion Erica Smith University of Ballarat Note: Paper has just been published in the English journal ‘Education + Training’

  2. What’s social inclusion? • A relatively new term to Australia (but not a new concept); • The process of rectifying a situation in which individuals and groups are excluded from participating in social, economic and political activity of society as a whole, due to poverty, lack of education and other circumstances (Vinson, 2009); • Some debate about whether it’s really about assisting the marginalised or whether it’s become an instrumentalist concern with national productivity.

  3. Social inclusion dimensions(North and Ferrier, 2009) • The cultural dimension - acceptance and respect for diverse norms, values and ways of living. • The economic dimension - income, employment, housing and working conditions. • The political dimension - power dynamics which generate unequal patterns of rights and ‘the conditions in which rights are exercised’ (SEKN, 2008) eg access to utilities, community infrastructure services, education, health and social protection. • The social dimension - relationships of support that enable a sense of well-being and connection with others, the community and broader social systems: family, friendships, neighbourhoods and social movements.

  4. Education and social inclusion/exclusion • Low socio-economic status (SES) students and those with other disadvantage have generally achieved at a lower level than other students in schools; • VET in schools has been successful among low SES students but this has a ‘dark side’; • Lack of achievement at school often stands as a barrier to participation in further education and training, ‘even’ VET.

  5. What’s different about traineeships from apprenticeships? • They are ‘new’ (approx 20 years) and more likely to be in newer industry areas and/or those which did not traditionally have any qualifications; • They cover many jobs where the workforce is predominantly female eg aged care, retail; • They suffered for many years from perceptions of low quality in delivery and a thin curriculum; • They usually last for 12-18 months as opposed to a typical 3-year apprenticeship.

  6. The new landscape of apprenticeships and traineeships(Top 10 commencements by Training Package, 2008) • Retail • Business Services • Tourism, hospitality & events • Transport & logistics • Community services • General construction • Metal and engineering • Automotive • Electrotechnology • Telecommunications This now reflects the modern economy much better than traditional apprenticeships do.

  7. Large-scale delivery of traineeships by employers • Through RTOs and through Enterprise RTOs • Financial incentives: employment inceptives and ‘user choice’ funding for RTOs. Sometimes with no government funding and therefore un-recorded. • Earlier research (Smith et al 2005, NCVER) found that companies were using ‘ladders of qualifications’ and that companies using nationally-recognised training provided more general training to ‘lower status’ workers. • Rainbird’s (2007) question: ‘Can training remove the sticky glue from the floor of low pay for workers?

  8. Some problems • Workplaces are not always ideal sites for learning because of necessary focus on production and because of power relations • While people may feel more comfortable learning at work rather than in an institution, there are still fears of failure

  9. Two case studies from project on traineeships • ANZ - indigenous young people, • Brotherhood of St Laurence – cleaning enterprises, long-term unemployed people.

  10. Pros of gaining qualifications through work (1)(Smith et al, 2009, NCVER) • Many people without qualifications are now able to gain them simply by virtue of having a job (cf Train to Gain in UK – 1m workers) • a lot of these traineeships are you know, targeting a blue collar audience… like someone who’s been a cleaner, may have been a cleaner for 5, 10 years, but there's been no formal recognition of what they’ve done, and … they see themselves as just a cleaner and the fact that the traineeship is also competency based and can recognise skills that they already have, without them needing to attend… a traditional classroom environment and having it on the job. So the combination of on the job and that recognition that what they're doing actually does have some value somewhere in an educational framework, has made them feel, I think, just a lot more proud about what they do, in themselves, with their self esteem.

  11. Pros (2) • Training is highly work-related and may not require much academic expertise; • Progression to higher-level qualifications available; • RPL might assist with progression; • Having better-qualified people can encourage employers to look to creating better jobs; • People do not have to pay for their training • Employers can feel happier about taking the risk of employing somebody with a poor employment record.

  12. Cons of gaining qualifications through work: (1) Integrity of qualification. • Danger of over-contextualisation; • Broad rather than narrow qualifications are more use to workers and more acceptable to many; • Too-easy assessment ; • Too much RPL. Many employers don’t trust it; • Some employers not able or willing to offer a variety of tasks.

  13. Cons of gaining qualifications through work: (2) Access • You have to be employed. Not much of a problem in Australia but it is in other countries; • Should unemployment rise it would be difficult to offer some of these quals in an RTO setting; • Not all employers engage with the system-industry area, firm size and geography play a part; • Some trainees don’t consciously undertake a qual-they are ‘passive learners’;

  14. Advantages and disadvantages for workers

  15. Advantages of sequential versus concurrent model

  16. Fewer hurdles and traps…

  17. Research and policy implications • More research needed to establish the social inclusion benefits of this means of gaining qualifications, eg longitudinal research with disadvantaged people; • Comparison of quality and utility of qualifications gained through work and those provided through education providers; • Funding for work-based qualifications should be maintained (a big policy debate in UK as well as Australia) – a small investment compared with long-term ‘rescue’ needed for people; • Need to reframe employers’ role as performing a social inclusion role on behalf of governments; • Employers need to be encouraged to address labour shortages through recruitment of disadvantaged people and proving them with qualifications; • More assistance to employers over practical issues of shepherding large numbers of disadvantaged workers through qualifications.

  18. As it happens… • I have just won, with colleagues Andy Smith & Arlene Walker, an Australian Research Council grant to look at enterprise RTOs and their delivery of qualifications. ‘How do qualifications delivered by enterprises contribute to improved skill levels and other benefits for companies, workers and the nation?’ • The project addresses many of the issues mentioned. • Partners are the Enterprise RTO Association (ERTOA) and ten of its member companies. • Research will take place throughout 2012 and 2013. • Contact e.smith@ballarat.edu.au

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