Scottish Careers Week
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.
Youth employability

Globally, nearly 68 million young women and men are looking for and available for work, and an estimated 123 million young people are working but living in poverty. The number who are not in employment, education or training (NEET) stands at 267 million, a majority of whom are young women. Significantly, young people are three times as likely as adults (25 years and older) to be unemployed.
Skills development is a primary means of enabling young people to make a smooth transition to work. A comprehensive approach is required to integrate young women and men in the labour market, including relevant and quality skills training, labour market information, career guidance and employment services, recognition of prior learning, incorporating entrepreneurship with training and effective skills forecasting. Improved basic education and core work skills are particularly important to enable youth to engage in lifelong learning as well as transition to the labour market.
Led by @skillsdevscot, a week of events and activities in Scotland is underway to showcase the importance of great career education and how to access support.
Follow #ScotCareersWeek22, and find out more at https://www.myworldofwork.co.uk/scottish-careers-week
Delivered by Skills Development Scotland (SDS), the national skills agency, along with a wide range of local and national partners, Scottish Careers Week will feature events and activities to help people of all ages explore, understand and manage their career choices, and the services and resources available to support them.
The week is also building on the success of the first campaign in 2021 to showcase job opportunities across Scotland’s industries. Employers and organisations across key Scottish sectors are planning events and resources for the week to provide career inspiration to attract future and current talent to their industries.
Want to get involved?
If you’d like to deliver activity during the week, visit My World of Work and read our ‘Get Involved' toolkit for ideas.
As part of this week, we are also holding 2 sessions with the UK Career Development Institute – a session to promote the benefits of CDI membership for practitioners in national service and further education sector, and a session promoting a career as a Career Adviser to increase interest in the profession and seek to increase diversity.
This is the Careers Week event webpage that is developing with more events being added daily across the week - Scottish Careers Week | My World of Work
Career guidance
Europe and Central Asia
