Children’s Day at Work
Finnish
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.
Think tanks, foundations and consultancy services
The platform also contains information and resources developed by Think tanks, foundations and consultancy services.
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.
Other topic
Children's Day at Work (Lapset mukaan töihin -päivä) is a nation-wide annual event in Finland celebrated on the Friday of the national Children’s Rights Week.
Children may not know what the adults in their lives are doing for a living, or even what ‘working’ actually means. But children like to know where the grown-ups spend their days, what work actually means, and what kinds of professions there are. It helps them learn how society functions and what the adults’ world is like. For the workplace, Children’s Day at Work provides an opportunity to hear the children’s fresh ideas on how things are at the workplace or, for example, on how work could be made more family-friendly. Children’s Day at Work is not intended to put the children to work, but to familiarise them with working life, help them picture how workplaces function and increase the participation of children and young people in the society.
There are multiple ways to participate: a workplace can send employees to a school or day care centre to talk about working life, or it can invite a group of children to the workplace from a nearby day care centre, school or after-school activity group. A workplace can also agree with its employees that they can bring a familiar child or children to work with them on the day.
Each year, hundreds of workplaces participate in the event.
Children's Day at Work is organized by the Office of the Ombudsman for Children and the Finnish Federation for Child Welfare.
Date: 21 November 2025
Place: In workplaces, schools and day care centres throughout Finland
Languages: Finnish, Swedish & English
For more information, see the event website https://lapsetmukaantoihin.fi/en/front-page/
Europe and Central Asia