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Lifelong Learning in Europe: Tensions between economic and social imperatives
Monday 26th March 2007
Welcome and Brief Overview of the Project
Professor Sheila Riddell and Dr Elisabet Weedon, University of Edinburgh
Towards a Lifelong Learning Society in Europe
EU funded 6th framework project
The Project
• Examines tensions between knowledge based society, LLL and social inclusion in the context of EU enlargement
• Explores the contribution of the education system to LLL – focus on post-compulsory
• Includes secondary and primary data
• Aims to inform policy at EU and national level
Five subprojects
1. Review of literature and policy 2. Analysis of data from Adult Education
Survey3. Survey of adult returners in formal
education system4. SMEs and workplace learning5. The examines the views of views of
managers/stakeholders in educational institutions
The project team(s)
• 13 partner teams: Austria, Belgium (Flanders), Bulgaria, Czech Rep., Estonia (Lead), Hungary, Ireland, Lithuania, Norway, Russia, Slovenia, UK: England and UK: Scotland
• Each subproject is led by a group of two/three partner teams
Review of literature and policy documents: SP1
• October 2005 to September 2006• Each country produced a National Report
according to set format• Subproject 1 team produced a Comparative
Report based on the National Reports• Led to this seminar – it reports on some of the
issues in relation to policy in Scotland, England and EU and explores the development of a typology of lifelong learning
A Scottish Policy Approach for Lifelong Learning
Gillian Little, Research Officer, Analytical Services DivisionEnterprise, Transport & Lifelong Learning Department
Introduction - The Lifelong Learning Strategy and a Smart Successful Scotland
Why Lifelong Learning? • To keep pace with technological change• Demographics: we will have fewer young people entering
the workforce in the future: by 2022, 42% of the population of Scotland will be aged over 50
• Closing the opportunity gap - learning plays an important role in providing a route out of poverty
Introduction - The Lifelong Learning Strategy and a Smart Successful Scotland informed by
FEDS
Framework for Economic Development in Scotland FEDS• To increase the economic opportunities for all on a socially
and environmentally sustainable basis.SSS aims to contribute to growth and productivity by• Growing businesses• Learning & skills• Close the gap in opportunities and quality of life between
different groups and areas within Scotland, strengthen communities and promote equality of opportunity.
The SE Lifelong Learning Strategy
“Our vision for LL in Scotland is to provide the best possible match between the learning opportunities open to people and the skills, knowledge,
attitudes and behaviours that will strengthen Scotland’s economy and society” (LL strategy)
• Employment rate of 76.2% – highest rate since records began in 1992.• Over 620,000 people of working age are currently inactive in Scotland.• 35% of people not in work do not have any qualifications.• 30% of people aged 25-64 have low skills – lower than UK • About 36,000 (14%) of 16-19 year olds are not in education,
employment or training (NEET)
Introduction - The Lifelong Learning Strategy and a Smart Successful Scotland
Measurements of success• reducing the proportion of 16-19 years old not in education,
employment or training (NEET)• increasing support to 16-19 year olds from low income families to
stay on at school and/or further education college • increasing the proportion of graduates in the workforce • reducing the proportion of working age adults whose highest
qualification is below SCQF level 5 (SVQ 2) • reducing the proportion of 18-29 year olds whose highest
qualification is below SCQF level 6 (SVQ 3) • increasing the proportion of people in employment undertaking
training.
Key Elements of the Lifelong Learning Strategy
Just to name a few…
• Adult Literacy and Numeracy in Scotland - ALNIS• Education Maintenance Allowance - EMA• Individual Learning Accounts Scotland - ILA• Modern Apprenticeships - MA• Skillseekers • NEET Strategy – young people not in education, employment or
training
• Also, greater employer engagement, greater emphasis on IAG, recognition of importance of community learning and new & better equipped qualification framework the SCQF
Lifelong Learning - Building On Success:
• A discussion of specific issues related to lifelong learning in Scotland
• Themes• Engagement with Employers• Flexible Learning Opportunities, Entitlement and
Discretionary Support• Information, Advice and Guidance• Community Learning and Development• Journeys Into and Through Learning
Leitch Review
Skills review recommends that UK commit to become world leader in
skills by 2020:• 95% of adults to achieve basic skills of literacy and
numeracy.• Exceeding 90% of adults qualified to at least level 2
(increase from 69% in 2005)• Shifting balance of intermediate skills from Level 2 to
Level 3• Exceeding 40% of adults qualified to Level 4 and above
(up from 29% in 2005).
Workforce plus – an Employability Framework for Scotland (2006)
Employability – encompassing those things that enable people to increase their chances of getting a job, staying in, and progressing further, in work.
Aims to reduce numbers dependent on DWP benefits in 7 priority areas
Themes– Early interventions– Client focused interventions– Employer engagement– Sustaining and progressing employment– Joined up planning and delivery– Better outcomes
NEET – Young people 16-19 not in education, employment or training
‘More choices, more chances’ – The NEET strategy published 2006.
• Headline figure of 36,000 young people being NEET (14%)
• Around 20-25,000 who will need additional support to access and sustain opportunities in labour market
• Heterogeneous group – for some finite, transitional stage, for others symptom of disadvantage and disengagement indicating lifelong disengagement.
NEET – Young people 16-19 not in education, employment or training
Main Aims of the NEET strategy:• Stem the flows into NEET – prevention rather than cure• Have a system wide focus on, ambitious for, ownership
of, accountability for the NEET group• Prioritise education and training outcomes for the NEET
group as step towards lifelong employability• Position NEET reduction as one of key indicators for
measuring the pre and post 16 systems’ success.
NEET – Young people 16-19 not in education, employment or training
Policies supporting NEET strategy, pre and post 16:• A curriculum for excellence (ACfE) including Determined
to Succeed strategy and Schools of Ambition (SoA)• Developing careers guidance & support (e.g. Careers
Scotland) and extended Post school psychological services (PSPS)
• Educational Maintenance Allowances• Engaging employers• Growth in MAs and Skillseekers
The Lifelong Learning Strategy and a Smart Successful Scotland - Conclusions
• Scottish qualification profiles are ‘better’ than the rest of the UK• Still polarisation between those engaged in learning and those not• Scotland’s long term economic growth is lower than the rest of the
UK
• Challenges• Participation needs to be deepened and widened• How to address needs of those most distant from learning• Need flexibility to respond to changing demography• How to encourage employer demand for skills and use of these
Lifelong Learning: Policy and Practice in England
Professor John Holford, Dept. of Political, International & Policy Studies,
University of Surrey & LLL2010 Project Team
Outline
• Landmarks in policy formation– New Labour’s original vision; main policy
documents
• Institutional change
• Policy themes– skills, widening participation, social purpose
• Themes & explanations
Landmarks in policy formationThree major early New-Labour policy contributions:• Dearing (Higher Education in the Learning Society 1997)
– Higher Education • Kennedy (Learning Works: Widening Participation in
Further Education 1997)– Further Education
• Fryer (Learning for the 21st Century 1998 & Creating Learning Cultures 1999)– Continuing Education, lifelong learning (and everything)
LLL features centrally in all of these:– following international policy development trends (OECD,
EU, etc.)– on Major government’s agenda too
What imagined future?• Dearing:
– LLL ‘main organising concept of analysis’ of HE (Watson/Taylor) – credit & qualifications frameworks, ICT, work experience …
• Kennedy:– widening participation – learning key to economic prosperity & social cohesion: learning
for life and learning for work are inseparable – equity: funding to people with less success in earlier learning– national campaign to stimulate mass demand for learning
(flexible credits, fair student funding, etc.)• Fryer:
– Need for a ‘culture of LLL’; strategy across education & public policy; equity;
– partnership; flexibility; LLL ‘a shared responsibility’ (gov’t, employers, individuals, etc.); ‘people before structures’
The essential policy framework
• The Learning Age (green paper)• Learning to Succeed (white paper)• Learning & Skills Act 2000• Learning & Skills Council
– responsible for all public post-16 education, except HE• Overarching targets:
– HE participation at 50% of 18-30 yr olds by 2010– improving basic skills of 1.5m adults by 2007– reducing adults without NVQ2 by 40% by 2010
A new institutional orderInstitutional ‘permanent revolution’ continued:• Learning & Skills Council
– replaced FEFC and TEC– national & local LSCs– complex new relationships: with gov’t (Treasury,
Health, DTI, etc.), local gov’t, employers, voluntary sector, etc.: Learning Partnerships, Careers/Connexions, Neighbourhood Renewal, libraries, …
• Individual Learning Accounts …• HE: new structures and approaches
Overarching LLL policy themes
• Skills: ‘Education is the best economic policy we have’*– big push on adults reaching Level 2 qualifications– need for change in workplace culture: guidance,
focussing on individual needs• Widening Participation:
– progress to 50% participation target by 2010– lower socio-economic groups under-represented– continuing emphasis on younger people, skills
*Tony Blair quoted in The Learning Age (1998)
What about ‘social purpose’?• ‘As well as securing our economic future, learning … helps make
ours a civilised society, develops the spiritual side of our lives and promotes active citizenship. Learning enables people to play a full part in their community. It strengthens the family, the neighbourhood and … the nation. It helps us fulfil our potential and opens doors to a love of music, art and literature. …
• ‘We are fortunate … to have a great tradition of learning. ... the great self-help movements of the Victorian industrial communities … the creation of libraries, … workers' institutes, …pioneering efforts of the early trade unions, … evening classes, … Learning enriched their lives and they … enriched the whole of society.
• ‘The Learning Age will be built on a renewed commitment to self-improvement and on a recognition of the enormous contribution learning makes to our society.’
(D. Blunkett, Foreword to The Learning Age 1998.)
Social purpose: community development
Major initiatives across government:• Neighbourhood Renewal (ODPM/DCLG)
– £900m over 3 years; support for community groups (Community Empowerment Fund; Community Chest, etc.)
– skills & knowledge for professionals, practitioners, residents (training, networking, good practice)
• Sustainable Communities– Skills for sustainable communities, ASC, etc.
• Civil Renewal (Home Office)– Active Learning for Active Citizenship
Social purpose: adult education• marginalisation of liberal adult education
– reduction in public funding: “in October 2005 overall numbers of people aged 19+ in publicly-funded English FE were down 9% (to just 1.5 million) on the previous year.” (NIACE)
– end of extra-mural AE in ‘old’ universities – reshaping WEA into LSC priorities– weakening of non-vocational (local authority) AE
• shift of funding from older to younger learners– “Every age cohort over 30 decreased, most steeply among over
60’s where numbers were down by 23.8%.” (NIACE)– in tension with demographic trends– linked to impact of Learning & Skills Act 2000: LSC must meet
needs of 16-18 year olds; can only spend what is left on others: “every extra young full-time student place is paid for by approximately ten fewer part-time adult students” (NIACE)
A DfES ‘concept map’ of education• About the Department• Public Service Agreement targets: Review of
performance in 2005–06• Children, Young People & Schools • Adults Skills & Further Education• Higher Education• Capability to Deliver: The Department’s Workforce;
Capability to Deliver: Workforce Reform• Spending to Deliver; Investing to Deliver; Efficiency to
Deliver[DfES Departmental Report 2006]
Themes
• learning a constant theme in policy rhetoric– increasing (though limited) recognition of informal learning
• economic priorities outweigh social– though wider social contribution of learning recognised;
especially in rhetoric (e.g. white paper forewords) & social renewal initiatives
• markets key to effective delivery– institutions as bureaucratic impediments - rather than sources of
knowledge, expertise, experience• new delivery structures
– partnerships, service agreements, targets, etc. – contract relationships replacing trust, in all sectors
– accountability, auditing
Explanations• Role of international policy priorities
– measure of continuity with Major governments• Role of education & AE in Labour traditions
– Blunkett enthusiast for ‘soft’, ‘citizenship’ agendas• Labour acceptance of neo-liberal consensus
– re competition, globalisation, skills, human capital,– re efficiency of markets (& failure of institutions, professionals,
bureaucracies) as delivery mechanisms• Role of Treasury in policy-making
– e.g. delivery against targets; Skills (Leitch review)
European Policy on Lifelong Learning
Jacky Brine
Professor of EU Education Policy
University of the West of England, Bristol
1. The bigger EU policy picture
2. Lifelong Learning Programme 2006
3. European Social Fund 2007-2013
EU key texts
• 1993 White Paper: Growth, Competitiveness, Employment
• 1995 White Paper: Education & Training • 1999 European Employment Strategy• 2000 Lisbon Strategy• 2000 Memorandum on Lifelong Learning• 2001 Commission Communication on LLL• 2002 Council Resolution on LLL• 2003 Education & Training Workprogramme 2010• 2006 Lifelong Learning Programme 07-13• 2006 European Social Fund (Regulation 07-13)
1993 White Paper: Growth, competitiveness, employment
The Community now faces the danger of not only a dual labour market but also a dual society.
p134, original emphasis
White Paper: Education & Training (1995)‘those that know … and those that do not’
• High knowledge-skill learner – ‘traditional’ (academic) – recognisable, transferable qualifications
• Low knowledge-skill learner– ‘modern’ (vocational)– accreditation of experiences & competencies– personal skills card– unemployed or early school leaver
European Employment Strategy 1999
Aim is to increase in sustainable employment
Four pillars:
1. improve employability
2. develop entrepreneurship
3. encourage adaptability of businesses & their employees
4. strengthen policies for equal opportunities between women and men
more from the EES …
• concern over ‘quality of school education’ – options of training, retraining, work practice, job or other employability measure.
• Each MS will review and, where appropriate, refocus its benefit & tax system and provide incentives for unemployed or inactive people to seek and take up work or measures to enhance their employability.
Lisbon Strategy 2000 … towards 2010
The Union must become the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world, capable of sustainable growth with more and better jobs and greater social cohesion.
2. Lifelong learning … towards Council Resolution 2002
• Lifelong…. – pre-nursery to post-retirement
• Lifewide…. – formal, non-formal & informal
• Employability• Active citizenship• Social inclusion • Personal fulfilment
• Knowledge economy / societyhigh or low knowledge-skilled learners
the low knowledge-skilled learner• Curricula content – basic & social skills• Identified as:
– people on low incomes– disabled people– ethnic minorities & immigrants– early school leavers– lone parents– unemployed people– parents returning to the labour market– workers with low levels of education & training– people outside the labour market– senior citizens (including older workers)– ex-offenders
2001 Communication on LLL, p13
the high knowledge-skilled learner
• recognisable, transferable qualifications• provision • identified only as graduate / post-graduate
– workers in paid (continual) employment– stayed at school and gained high levels of education– on middle to high incomes– able bodied– ‘white’ British– below retirement age– not a lone parent– not an ex-offender
Lifelong learning programme 2006 The overarching priority of the Lifelong Learning Programme is to
reinforce the contribution made by education and training to achieving the Lisbon goal of making the EU the most competitive knowledge-based economy, with sustainable economic development, more and better jobs, and greater social cohesion.
Every part of the programme will give priority to action supporting development of national LLL strategies ….
• ‘from childhood to old age’• €6,970 million for 2007-2013 period
LLL Programme General Call for Proposal (2006) p2(emphasis added)
The ‘4 pillars’ of the lifelong learning programme 2006 ….. ‘mobility’
– Comenius – €1,047 m pre-school & school education
3m children in joint educational activities
– Erasmus – €3,114 m higher education
3m individuals in student mobility by 2012
– Leonardo da Vinci – €1,725 m vocational E&T
80,000 placements per year in enterprises
– Grundtvig – €358 m adult education
support mobility of 7,000 individuals annually (involved in adult education)
3. European Employment Strategy + European Social Fund
• ESF 1999-2006 linked to EES
• UK €9.4 billion 07-13 (€15.85 billion 00-06)
• MS National Reform Programme (Lisbon)
• MS National Strategic Reference Framework – priorities for Funds
• NSRF informs detailed Operational Programmes – E,S,W,NI
• DTI coordinates UK Framework
• Regional Skills Partnerships – regional ESF strategy
ESF 2007-2013 Priorities for assistance
• increase adaptability of workers, enterprises and entrepreneurs
• enhancing access to employment and preventing unemployment
• reinforcing social inclusion of disadvantaged people & combating discrimination in the labour market
• enhancing human capital
• promoting partnerships at all levels
Social Fund in the UK
• Convergence funding to (€2.6 billion) • Cornwall & Isles of Scilly
• West Valleys and the Valleys
• Highlands & Islands
• All other areas of UK eligible for competitiveness funding (€6.2 billion)– South Yorkshire & Merseyside (ring-fenced ‘phasing-
in’ funding)
UK Social Fund priority 11. extending employment opportunities
– unemployed & economically inactive people– disadvantaged groups – people with disabilities & health conditions– lone parents– older workers– ethnic minorities– young people– disadvantaged & excluded people– reducing numbers of young people not in education,
employment or training, … reforming vocational routes for 14-19 year olds
UK Social Fund priority 22. developing a skilled & adaptable
workforce– basic literacy & numeracy– progression from Foundation to level 2– tackling ‘skills deficit’ in workforce– improving ‘enterprise’ skills– occupational/sectoral gendered under-
representation – develop small business skills for knowledge-
based economy
+ some scope for supporting
• training trainers to deliver basic skills to target groups
• progression of disadvantaged groups to higher education
• technical, management & enterprise skills in small businesses
EU lifelong learning policy is …..
• agreed by MSs & MEPs• directly related to agreed EU objectives & strategies (EES, Lisbon)• directly related to National plans & strategies also agreed with EC • a significant funding stream for MSs• focused primarily on low-knowledge skilled learners
– exception Erasmus • concerned primarily with
– mobility & transferability (LLL Programme)– employability & vocational skills (Social Fund)– social inclusion (Social Fund)
• not directly concerned with– personal fulfilment – ie ‘non-vocational’ learning
Employment rates: 18-state pension age,people with no qualifications (excluding students)
(UK)(Freud Report on Welfare Reform, 2007)
A Typology of Lifelong Learning in Europe
Sheila Riddell, Judith Litjens,
Elisabet Weedon,University of Edinburgh
Three worlds of welfare capitalism(Esping-Andersen,1989)
• the ‘liberal’ welfare state - limited social insurance plan and means tested benefits. Beneficiaries usually low-income working-class (e.g. United States and United Kingdom);
• the ‘conservative-corporatist’ regime - aims to retain existing social hierarchies. Strong emphasis on social insurance (e.g. Belgium, Austria); and
• the ‘social-democratic’ regime - aims to promote equality and provide universal benefits. Has a universal insurance scheme but uses some means-testing in provision of benefits (e.g. Norway).
Welfare families (Castles)
• English-speaking family (Ireland, UK)
• Nordic family
• Continental Western European group (France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands)
• Southern European group (Greece, Portugal, Spain)
Variants on new European socioeconomic model (Aiginger)
• Scandinavian
• Continental
• Anglo-Saxon
• Mediterranean
• Catching-up
Methods of typology development
• Data gathered on range of indicators e.g.• GDP & % spent on education• Employment rate• Employment protection, poverty risk,
measures to support disadvantaged • Ed. System characteristics & outcome• Participation in lll• Policies on lll
Table 1: Data contributing to typology of lll
Nor UK - Sco UK - Eng
UK Ire Bel - Fla Aus Slo Hun Cze Est Lit Bul Rus
GDP (% GDP spent on ed.)
198 (7.6%)
118.6 (7%) :
124 (5.4%)
160 (4.4%)
120.5 (5.6% in 2001)
128 (5.5%)
57 (6%) 33 (5.9%)
36 (4.6%) 28 (5.7%) 22 (5.2%) 10 (4.2%)
: (3.7% 2002)
Employ. rate 74.8 71.5 : 71.7 67.6 64.3 68.6 66 56.9 64.8 64.4 62.6 55.8 65
Employ. protection
2.6 :
:
1.1 1.3 2.5 (B) 2.2 2.9 1.7 1.9 2.6 2.7 : :
Poverty risk 11 : : 18 21 15 (B) 13 10 12 8 18 15 14 :
Support for disadv groups
Adequate Partial Partial Partial Partial Partial Partial Adequate Partial : : : Partial No info in NR
Compulsory ed. Comp Comp Comp Comp Comp Stratified Stratified Comp Comp Comp Comp Comp Comp
Comp
% with upper sec ed
95.3 70.6:
76.4 85.3 69.8 85.3Stratified
83.4 90.9 82.2 86.1 76 70.7 (2002)
% in any LLL 34.7 : : 39.8 48.9 41.9 (B) 89.2 Stratified 11.7 28.7 31.4 27.8 16.1 :
% in formal LLL
3.9 ::
8.4 5.4 4 (B) 3Stratified
2.9 1.4 3.7 3 1.2 :
% in formal and non-formal LLL
17.8 :
:
27.5 7.4 9.1 12.9
Stratified
3.9 5.6 5.9 6 1.3 :
% in LLL by work status
: :
:
Em: 23.1 Un: 20.5 In: 13.9
Em: 6.1 Un: 5.5 In: 6
Em: 11.4 Un: 12.6 In: 5.2
Em: 12.7 Un: 14.9 In: 8.1 Stratified
Em: 4.5 Un: 3.2 In: 3.2
Em: 6.6 Un: 2.2 In: 3.7
Em: 7.2 Un: 4.6 In: 4.2
Em: 6.8 Un: 3.8 In: 3.4
: :
% in any learning by ed att
Low: 15 Med: 30 High: 51
: : Low: 12 Med: 37 High: 61
Low: 35 Med: 51 High: 66
Low: 23 Med: 42 High: 67
Low: 87 Med: 89 High: 95 Stratified
Low: 4 Med: 11 High: 27
Low: 10 Med: 26 High: 63
Low: 10 Med: 25 High: 52
Low: 6 Med: 21 High: 60
Low: 2 Med: 12 High: 45
:
Emphasis on HC
High High High High High High HighStratified
High High High High High High
Emphasis on SC
High Medium Medium High High Low/Medium
LowStratified
Low Low/Medium
Medium/High
Medium/Low
Low/Medium
Low
Emphasis on PD
High Medium Medium High High Medium/ Low
Low Stratified
Low Medium/Low
Low Medium/ Low
Low Low
Data contributing to typology of lifelong learning
Data sources (see glossary)
• Eurostat
• Euridyce
• EU communications
• National Reports
Difficulties in typology development
• General problems with welfare state typologies (welfare states & nation states)
• Basis for inclusion in particular category
• Including new member states
• Consistency and reliability of data
Country similarities & differences: broad economic & social indicators
• Marked divide in GDP between old & new member states
• Less variation in % GDP spent on education – but richest country (Norway) spends highest %)
• Highest employment rates: Norway, Scotland• UK & Ireland have least regulated labour markets• Slovenia & Norway have ‘adequate’ measures for
disadvantaged• Risk of poverty – greatest in Ireland & UK; least in
Norway & Slovenia
Percentage with at least upper secondary education (2003)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Bel - Fla UK - Sco Rus Bul UK Est Hun Ire Aus Lit Slo Cze Nor
Countries
%
% withuppersec
Percentage with at least secondary ed: key points
• Most systems comprehensive: exceptions Austria & Flanders
• Countries grouped closely together – but little variation between old & new member states
• Flanders - lowest percentage
• Norway – highest percentage
Percentage of the population in formal LLL (2003)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Bul Cze Hun Aus Lit Est Nor Bel - Fla Ire Slo UK
Countries
%
% informalLLL
Percentage in formal lll: key points
• UK - high proportion if formal lll, followed by Slovenia & Ireland - flexible HE
• Austria - relatively low participation (behind Estonia & Lithuania) - rigid HE system
• Lowest participation – Bulgaria (also poorest country)
LLL participation by educational attainment (2003)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Hun Bul Lit Est Cze Nor UK Bel - Fla Ire Slo Aus
Countries
%
Low
Med
High
Lll by educational attainment: key points
• In all countries, those with higher levels of educational attainment most likely to be involved in lll (formal, non-formal, informal)
• Austria appears to have highest participation, but LFS data for 2003 did not include informal learning for all countries
Aiginger’s typology applied to lll (1)
• Scandinavian model: Norway - emphasis on human capital, social capital & personal development. High investment in lll combined with regulated labour markets
• Anglo-Saxon model: Ireland, Scotland, England – High participation in lll, low labour market regulation, high poverty risk
Lll seen as driver of economy & means of combating social exclusion
Aiginger’s typology applied to lll (2)
• Continental model: Rigid & stratified education system. Emphasis on lll as creator of human capital, less on social capital Tightly regulated labour market, but little attention to disadvantaged
• Catching-up model: Slovenia has many features in common with old member states, particularly emphasis on social inclusion.
• Estonia & Lithuania – some features of Baltic states?• Hungary & Czech Republic – reflections of continental
model?• Need for much greater focus on developments in Central
& Eastern European countries.
Research into Macro-level Characteristics that Influence Participation in Lifelong Learning
in the EU-15
Ella Desmedt, Steven Groenez, Gert Van den Broeck, m.m.v. Miet Lamberts
Commissioner and commissioner’s worry
• Flemish minister of work, education and training• 1 aug ’06 – 15 dec ’06
• Lisbon Target: 12,5%• Flanders: Stagnation ??
Flanders EU-25 EU-15
2004 9,8% 9,4% 10,7%
2005 9,13% 10,7% 11,2%
Research questions
• Which macro-level (country) characteristics can account for the inequalities in overall participation rates in LLL between the EU-15?
• Which macro-level (country) characteristics explain the differences between the EU-15 in inequalities in participation rates (according to age, level of education, working status and sex)?
• What is the role of government policy in stimulating or hampering (inequalities in) participation?
Method
• Comparative education: system approach– LLL is functional within the broader economic, social
and cultural systems in which it is embedded – All subsystems strongly interact
• Methodological empirism (Noah & Eckstein, 1969, 1998)– Stage 1: literature review system ‘map’– Stage 2: find appropriate indicators/proxies– Stage 3: quantitatively exploring this ‘map’ by means
of multivariate regression analysis
Literature review• Inventory of relevant system characteristics
– Education (initial – LLL)– Economy– Labour market– Welfare system– Demography– Culture– Next slide: Indicate by markers (+,- , ?) the expected
effect of the characteristic on • overall participation rate in LLL (first marker)
• inequalities in participation rate (second marker)
Values
- social democratic ideology
- work ethics
- esteem for education
- individualism
- readiness to take risks
+↓
+
+
+
+
CULTURE
Economic growth +
Level of innovation +
Industrial structure: size of companies +
Product market competition +
ECONOMYLabour market flexibility +↑
Employment rate +
Occupational structure: share of employees in
knowledge intensive jobs
+
Industrial relations
- Trade union membership
- Level of wage compression
?
?
Employment rate women +
Employment rate older workers -
LABOUR MARKET
Active labour market policy +↓
Generosity of replacement incomes and early
retirement systems
?
WELFARE SYSTEM
Initial education
Educational attainment of the population +
Institutional differentiation (stratification) ?↑
Strong system of vocational education ?↓
Length of compulsory education +
Adult education
Supply of adult education +↓
Transparancy and information +↓
Visibility and recognition of learning +?
Quality +?
A large role of the government in financing LLL ?↓
Autonomy and deregulation in provision LLL ?
EDUCATION
Age structure: share of young persons in the
active population
+
Late transition adolescence-adulthood +
Amount of divorces +
DEMOGRAPHY
ParticipationLLL
Data: indicators• Participation LLL
– LFS, 2004, population aged 25-64, ref. period 4 weeks prior to the interview
– Participation in formal and non-formal learning activities
• System characteristics– EUROSTAT/OECD– Availability:
• OK: economy, labour market, welfare system, initial education,…
• Problem: adult education ‘proxies’ e.g. based on ‘European report on quality indicators of lifelong learning’: comprehensiveness/coherence LLL policy
Limitations of the data • Very global indicator for participation: no
information on e.g. volume of LLL, goal or content of LLL, job- or person-related,…
• Small sample • Interrelated structural characteristics
Cautious interpretation: regression analysis used as exploratory tool
Cross-validation between literature and (exploratory) data-analysis
Results
Overall participation LLL in EU-15 (LFS, aged 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Participation rate in LLL in EU-15 split up by employment status(LFS, aged 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35Overall part rate Part rate employed
Regression models explaining general participation in LLL in EU-15 (LFS, 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
General participation rate
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Model 6 Model 7 st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff
Intercept 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
GDP/ capita 0.066 -0.091
Innovation-index 0.842 *** 0.568 *** 0.558 *** 0.412 ** 0.242 *
Employment rate 0.442 ** 0.361 ** 0.381 *** 0.389 *** 0.461 ***
# schooltypes 15-year olds -0.314 *** -0.401 *** -0.349 *** -0.363 ***
Share empl. in knowledge intensive jobs
0.219 * 0.225 ** 0.315 ***
Trade union membership 0.243 ** 0.354 ***
F-value 0.06 13.23 *** 25.51 *** 33.14 *** 31.33 *** 36.44 *** 36.46 ***
Adj R2 0.00 0.636 0.778 0.873 0.897 0.927 0.910
DF (1,13) (2,12) (2,12) (3,11) (4,10) (5,9) (4,10)
***: <0.01 **: <0.05 *: <0.10
Source: own calculations
Other variables:Other variables:-No extra explanationNo extra explanation-MulticollinearityMulticollinearity
Employment rate
Level of innovation
Product marketregulation
Educationallevel-
-
Public expenditureeducation
# school types15 y
-
-
% empl knowl
Participation LLL
- Negative correlation
Legend
Trade unionmembership
-
Explaining inequalities in participation
• Separate regression models for– Employed – unemployed – inactive– Low – middle – highly educated adults– Age categories (25-39, 40-59, 50-64)
• Regression models for– Relative participation rates women - men– Relative participation rates middle-young and old-young
adults– Relative participation rates low – highly educated adults
Participation rate in LLL in EU-15 split up by employment status(LFS, aged 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35Overall part rate Part rate employed
Participation rate in LLL in EU-15 split up by employment status (LFS, aged 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40Part rate employed Part rate unemployed Part rate inactive
Regression models for participation LLL in EU-15– unemployed (LFS, 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
Participation rate unemployed
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Model 6 Model 7 Model 8 st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff
Intercept 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Part. rate employed 0.954 ***
Unemployment rate -0.455 * -0.345 * -0.492 *** -0.410 *** -0.312 ** -0.283 ** -0.315 ***
Innovation-index 0.667 *** 0.551 *** 0.436 *** 0.141
# schooltypes 15-y olds -0.502 *** -0.564 *** -0.512 *** -0.515 *** -0.510 ***
Share part-time empl 0.250 * 0.404 ** 0.480 *** 0.436 ***
Trade union membership 0.349 ** 0.450 *** 0.443 ***
Replacement ratio unempl benefit
0.141 *
F-value 131.55 3.40 *** 10.66 *** 22.90 *** 23.17 *** 26.84 *** 34.08 *** 34.03 ***
Adj R2 0.90 0.146 0.580 0.824 0.864 0.902 0.904 0.922
DF (1,13) (1,13) (2,12) (3,11) (4,10) (5,9) (4,10) (5,9)
***: <0.01 **: <0.05 *: <0.10
Source: own calculations
Participation in LLL in EU-15 split up by initial educational attainment (LFS, aged 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50Overall part rate Part rate <=LSE Part rate HSE Part rate HE
Relative participation rate LLL in EU-15: low versus high educated (LFS, aged 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
0,0
0,1
0,1
0,2
0,2
0,3
0,3
0,4
0,4
0,5
0,5Overall part rate (left axis) Relative part rate <=LSE versus HE (right axis)
Regression models for participation LLL in EU-15 (LFS, 25-64, ref period 4 weeks)
Relative participation rate low versus highly educated adults
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Model 6 st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff st. coeff
Intercept 0 0 0 0 0 0
General participation rate 0.847***
Relative employment rate low versus highly educated
0.180 *
Relative employment rate women versus men
0.808 *** 0.487 *** 0.343 *** 0.368 ***
Expenses ALMP per unempl and as % GDP
0.627 *** 0.604 *** 0.584 ***
Coherence policy LLL 0.207 **
Comprehensivity policy LLL 0.204 **
F-value 32.94 0.44 24.45 *** 99.40 *** 91.33 *** 96.69 ***
Adj R2 0.695 0.03 0.626 0.934 0.951 0.954
DF (1,13) (1,13) (1,13) (2,12) (3,11) (3,11)
***: <0.01 **: <0.05 *: <0.10
Source: own calculations
% emplknowl
Educational level
Participation LLL
Employmentrate
Level of innovation
Trade union membership
Product marketregulation
Public expenditure
education
# school types 15 y
-
-
-
-
-
Explanationgeneral part LLL
Possible government interventions to reduce inequalitiesin participation
- Negative correlation
Legend
Inequalities in participation LLL
-
Compulsory education
Age 1st selection
Policy LLLcoher/
compreh
Active labour market
policy
-
-
- -
Further research• Take information on volume, content, motives,
… of participation into account• Investing in multilevel analyses on micro-data to
grasp full complexity and establish causality– Individual– Immediate social environment (education, work,
family,…)– System characteristics
• Effects of participation?
AES? LLL2010?
Thank you!
Steven Groenez
Higher Institute for Labour Studies (HIVA) – Catholic University Leuven Belgium