L’union des compétences face aux futurs (im)possibles: Une journée pour penser l’orientation, la formation et les métiers par le Design Fiction
French
Other sources
Experts from many international, regional and national agencies generously share their views, experiences and findings on skills, helping policy-makers among other stakeholders to understand the linkages between education, training and the world of work, and how to integrate skills into national development planning to promote employment and economic growth.
Career guidance and employment services
Career guidance and counselling, career education and lifelong development of skills for employability are key for success in learning activities, effective career transitions, livelihood planning, entrepreneurship and in increasing labour market participation. They are instrumental in promoting skills utilization, recognition (RPL), as well as in improving enterprise human resource management.
Career development activities encompass a wide variety of support activities including career information and advice, counselling, work exposure (e.g. job shadowing, work experience periods), assessment, coaching, mentoring, professional networking, advocacy, basic and employability skills training (curricular and non-curricular) and entrepreneurship training. It is often an area which is fragmented across different ministries (e.g. education, TVET, employment, youth) requiring an effort to achieve the necessary coordination to provide adequate support to individuals during learning, employment and unemployment/inactivity periods.
Lifelong learning
There is a critical need for a greater overall investment in education and training, particularly in developing countries. Education and training investments should be closely linked to economic and employment growth strategies and programmes. Responsibility should be shared between the government (primary responsibility), enterprises, the social partners, and the individual. To make lifelong learning for all a reality, countries will need to make major reforms of their vocational and education and training systems. School-to-work schemes for young people should integrate education with workplace learning. Training systems need to become more flexible and responsive to rapidly changing skill requirements. Reforms should also focus on how learning can be facilitated, not just on training for specific occupational categories.
Recognition and portability of skills
Skills development can be viewed from a life-cycle perspective of building, maintaining and improving competencies and skills. A holistic approach to skills development encompasses the following features: access to good basic education; development of cognitive and core skills, including literacy, numeracy, communication, problem-solving and learning ability; and, availability of continuous training opportunities targeting adult and older workers. Systems to improve recognition of attained skills across occupations, industries and countries improve the employability of workers, reduce labour shortages, and promote good working conditions for migrant workers.
Skills policies and strategies
Skills and employment policies should be viewed together. The full value of one policy set is realized when it supports the objectives of the other. For investments in education and training to yield maximum benefit to workers, enterprises, and economies, countries’ capacities for coordination is critical in three areas: connecting basic education to technical training and then to market entry; ensuring continuous communication between employers and training providers so that training meets the needs and aspirations of workers and enterprises, and integrating skills development policies with industrial, investment, trade, technology, environmental, rural and local development policies.
L’Agence Erasmus+ France/Education formation (Centre National Europass et Euroguidance) et France compétences (Point national de contact du Cadre Européen des Certifications) organisent leur biennale.
Dans un monde en transformation rapide (économique, écologique, technologique, géopolitique) l’avenir de l’orientation, des compétences et des certifications apparaît à la fois incertain, mouvant, mais aussi porteur d’opportunités inédites.
Face à ces enjeux, Europass, Euroguidance et le Cadre Européen des Certifications (CEC) dans le cadre de leur biennale, organisent une journée sous un format inédit et prospectif.
Cette journée vise à interroger les futurs possibles (et impossibles) des parcours professionnels, des systèmes d’accompagnement, de la mobilité et de la reconnaissance des compétences à l’échelle européenne.
Pour aborder ces transformations en profondeur, Europass, Euroguidance et le PNC CEC seront accompagnés par Making tomorrow, prestataire spécialisé en Design Fiction. Cette méthode, à la croisée de la prospective et du design, mobilise des scénarios imaginés et provocateurs pour poser de vraies questions, bousculer les représentations, et révéler les angles morts de nos systèmes actuels.
Heure: le 6 novembre 2025, de 09h30 à 16h30
Place: Lycée la Folie Saint James, 41 Rue de Longchamp, 92200 Neuilly-sur-Seine, Ile de France, France
Pour plus d'informations, veuillez consulter https://agence.erasmusplus.fr/evenements/lunion-des-competences-face-aux-futurs-impossibles/
Europe and Central Asia