Career education and counselling in Finnish schools
English
Governments
Governments hold a wealth of knowledge on skills development, and are increasingly realizing the value of learning from each others’ experiences. Their policy documents, programme evaluations, and research findings contain their experience and ideas on how to better link skills to employment
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.
Teachers, trainers and training organizations
At the heart of any skills system are the managers and staff of training institutions who face considerable challenges to deliver quality programmes at a time of fiscal constraint. As the expectations placed on institutions continue to grow, managers and trainers are increasingly expected to deliver flexible, responsive and current programmes based on strong partnerships with local employers that provide good employment outcomes. Because of this, there is a need for constituents to build the capacity of their institutional workforce to meet the expectations placed upon them by demand driven systems.
Other topic
The aim of Euroguidance Estonia is to create various opportunities for professional development in the field of career services. Given the great popularity of our international webinar series, which presented articles published in the collection “Career Theories and Models: Ideas for Practice” (CERIC, 2019) and the series Career Guidance Up North, organized in collaboration with Euroguidance centers in the Nordic and Baltic countries, we are pleased to announce that international training sessions will continue in autumn 2025 with renewed energy.
This time, we will meet on 12 November 2025, from 14:00 to 16:00, focusing on career education and guidance in Finnish schools. Recent research findings will be presented by Outi Ruusuvirta-Uuksulainen from the University of Jyväskylä. Practical experiences will be shared by the career specialist from Helsinki Language High School and researcher Laia Saló i Nevado from the University of Helsinki, as well as Pia Ranna, lecturer in teacher education at Haaga-Helia University of Applied Sciences.
Time: 12 November 2025 at 13:00-15:00 CET
Place: Online. Participation link to the webinar will be sent to registered participants no later than the day before the seminar takes place.
Languages: English with Estonian simultaneous translation