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Document 52012SC0253
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Council Recommendation on the Validation of non-formal and informal learning
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Council Recommendation on the Validation of non-formal and informal learning
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Council Recommendation on the Validation of non-formal and informal learning
/* SWD/2012/0253 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Council Recommendation on the Validation of non-formal and informal learning /* SWD/2012/0253 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Council
Recommendation on the Validation of non-formal
and informal learning This impact assessment accompanies the
proposal for a Recommendation of the Council on the validation of non-formal
and informal learning. 1. Problem definition Rapid economic and technological changes
with increasing job transitions are pushing individuals to acquire higher
qualifications and more generic skills. In this context education, training and
qualifications systems need to recognise the full range of learning experiences
(formal, non-formal, informal) through a learning outcomes approach. This can
be done through the validation of non-formal and informal learning. This principle was adopted by the Recommendation on the
European Qualification Framework (EQF) of 2008 to which this initiative is
complementary. Validation of non-formal and informal
learning experiences has many benefits for: –
Individuals: enhanced employability, enhanced
career prospects, increased wages, second chances for school dropouts, improved
access to formal education and training, higher motivation to learn and
increased self-confidence; –
The economy: a better skilled population, a better
skills match on the labour market, transferability of skills between companies
and sectors and more mobility on the European labour market, all of which
contribute to a more competitive European economy and higher economic growth; –
The society at large: a better qualified
population and workforce, a better access to further learning for disadvantaged
groups and a more inclusive labour market. The impact assessment defined two main problems to be addressed: (1)
Validation opportunities are limited and
underused in the majority of Member States. According to the 2010 update of the European Inventory on
validation of non-formal and informal learning, Cyprus Greece and Hungary offer
hardly any possibilities for validating non-formal and informal learning.
Bulgaria, Latvia, Malta and Poland recently took steps towards the setting up
of systems for the validation of non-formal and informal learning, but the
validation system itself in these countries is still in its initial stage. In
Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Italy, Ireland, Lithuania,
Slovakia and Slovenia validation systems exist in one or more sectors, and are
only used by small numbers of individuals. Also in countries with a more
developed validation system such as Denmark, Germany, Luxembourg, Romania,
Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom the take up rate of validation is still
rather limited. The limited and underused validation
opportunities make that skills remain invisible and are not used to their full
potential for the benefit of individuals, the economy and the society at large.
Three drivers for the limited availability and
use of validation systems are the lack of trust in validation systems,
processes and outcomes (confirmed by the public consultation held for the
purpose of this initiative), the low awareness of validation possibilities in
countries where validation opportunities exist (also confirmed by the public
consultation) and cultural and attitudinal barriers towards validation of
non-formal and informal learning. The first two drivers are addressed by this
initiative. (2)
A lack of comparability and coherence between
the validation approaches of Member States. The
current uneven availability and disparities between national validation
policies and practices reduce the comparability and transparency of validation
systems. They make it difficult for citizens to combine learning outcomes
acquired in different settings, on different levels and in different countries.
They create obstacles for the transnational mobility of learners and workers at
times where such mobility is needed for creating more economic growth. The
Europe 2020 Strategy on smart, inclusive and sustainable growth stresses the
need for more flexible learning pathways and sees validation of non-formal and
informal learning as a pre-requisite for these. Validation will also contribute
to achieving the EU headline targets as defined under Europe 2020 Strategy on
early school leaving, on tertiary education attainment, on poverty reduction
and on a high employment rate. 2. Analysis of subsidiarity Articles 165 and 166 of
the Treaty on the functioning of the European Union (TFEU) foresee that the
Union will contribute to the development of quality education and implement a
vocational training policy by encouraging co-operation between Member States
and, where necessary, supporting and supplementing their action, while fully
respecting the responsibility of the Member States for the content of teaching
and the organisation of education systems and vocational training. The current initiative recommends lines of
action to be implemented by the Member States with some European support. It
proposes actions that will need implementation at Member State and at EU level.
Member States will remain entirely responsible for the design, development and
implementation of their arrangements (laws, regulations, collective agreements)
for the validation of non-formally and informally acquired learning outcomes.
The EU level will provide coordination – including in particular coordination with
the relevant European instruments – and support by organising, for instance,
peer learning activities. Action on both levels is complementary and the
prerogatives of Member States are safeguarded. 3. Objectives of the
initiative The general, specific and operational objectives
of this initiative are the following: General objectives: (1)
To provide citizens in all Member States with
the opportunity to validate their skills acquired outside formal education and
training systems; (2)
To provide citizens with the opportunity of
using their validated skills for working and learning purposes throughout
Europe. Specific objectives: (1)
To put in place systems for the validation of
non formal and informal learning at national level linked to the National
Qualifications Framework; (2)
To establish an appropriate level of comparability
and coherence between national validation systems linked to the National Qualifications
Framework. Operational objectives: (1)
To promote national qualification frameworks in
a way that qualifications can be acquired through formal programmes as well as
through the validation of non-formal and informal learning; (2)
To provide mechanisms for the identification,
documentation, and quality assured assessment and validation of skills acquired
through non-formal and informal learning, taking advantage of common European
instruments such Europass, ECTS, ECVET; (3)
To allow individuals to have their skills and
competences identified and documented without resulting into a formal
qualification; (4)
To extend and intensify the cooperation and
exchange of good practice between Member States, supported by peer-learning
activities and European reporting tools; (5)
To raise the awareness of validation
opportunities. 4. Policy options Option 1 (baseline scenario): This option consists of
the continuation of the current situation which can be summarised as follows: –
Validation of non-formal and informal learning
is taken into account in European policies concerning education and training,
employment, youth and active citizenship; –
Existing European instruments, in particular the
EQF Recommendation, call for the possibility to validate experiences acquired
through non-formal and informal learning, without indicating how to do it; –
The Common European principles on validation adopted
by the Council in 2004, the European guidelines on validation by Cedefop, as
well as available funding through the Lifelong Learning Programme, the future "Erasmus
for All" Programme and the European Social Fund, as supporting tools for
validation policy and practice in the Member States will continue to be
relevant; –
Validation is part of the policy agenda in most
Member States, but only implemented in a comprehensive way in a few Member
States; –
Member States exchange experiences on validation
under the Open Method of Coordination (in particular in the EQF Advisory
Group). Option 2 (Council Recommendation on the implementation
of validation): Option 2 proposes
political and practical measures to Member States, stakeholders and the
Commission in the form of a Council Recommendation, as announced by the Europe
2020 flagship initiatives "Youth on the Move" and "Agenda for
New Skills and Jobs". . The Recommendation
invites Member States to put in place mechanisms for the validation of
non-formal and informal learning linked to national
qualifications frameworks. These mechanisms should include quality assurance
mechanisms, facilitate the portability of learning outcomes by using
standardised documentation tools, raise awareness of validation opportunities,
facilitate access to validation in particular for disadvantaged groups, ensure
appropriate guidance to individuals and finally provide the opportunity to
individuals to undergo a skills audit within three months of an identified
need. The Recommendation stresses the need to
involve labour market stakeholders (e.g. to record learning outcomes acquired
in the workplace), as well as education and training providers (e.g. to provide
opportunities to gain access to formal education and training) and the third
sector (e.g. NGO/volunteer organisations). The Recommendation will be complemented by
more intensive cooperation on the validation of non-formal and informal
learning within the existing EQF Advisory Group as Open Method of Coordination
structure. The Recommendation invites the Commission to regularly update the
European Inventory and the European Guidelines on the validation of non formal
and informal learning and to support the implementation of the Recommendation
by organising effective peer learning activities. The Council Recommendation is expected to
be approved in 2012, with an implementation of the proposed mechanisms by the
Member States and the European Commission from 2013 onwards. Option 3 (A new Open Method of
Coordination devoted to validation aimed at the development of a European
Quality Charter on validation): Under Option 3 Member
States will work together, in a new Open Method of Coordination (OMC) specifically devoted to validation,
aiming at the setting up of a European Quality Charter on the validation of
non-formal and informal learning. The European Quality Charter will be
formulated around the following lines: quality ensured validation procedures,
quality standards for assessors, guidance and counselling, access to
validation, stakeholder involvement, specific target groups and the European
dimension of validation. The European Quality Charter will build on
both European (e.g. European guidelines and the common European principles on
validation) and on national initiatives (public and private) related to quality
assurance in the area of validation. A European Quality Charter will contribute
to building trust and confidence between Member States. The new OMC process will consist of a new
set of reporting mechanisms by Member States and monitoring of progress by the
Commission. Dedicated OMC mechanisms are expected to be
in place in 2012, leading to the approval of the Charter in 2014. Its
implementation will follow from 2015 onwards. 5. Assessment of Impacts Appropriate action by the Member States,
through the creation of more validation opportunities, allowing for the use of
available knowledge, skills and competences to their full potential, will have
significant economic and social impacts. There will only be limited
environmental impacts. The social, economic and other impacts have
been examined in qualitative terms based on likely impacts, as there are no
hard data available. For each of the likely impacts a comparison with the
baseline scenario has been made. The most important economic and social
impacts of setting up comprehensive validation systems are: –
A positive contribution to economic growth and
employment through a better use of available skills in the labour market and
through more skills development; –
A better access to the labour market and easier
job transitions, through the inclusion of all available skills in recruitment
decisions and for occupational changes; –
A better access to further learning through a
better recognition of prior learning experiences by education and training
institutions; –
Better information on available skills which
become more visible thanks to more validation opportunities; –
A higher education level of workers (both
through the validation of existing skills and through a better access to
further learning); –
Potentially better working conditions for
individuals thanks to higher qualifications; –
Improved equality and social inclusion by
creating more opportunities for validation of non-formal and informal learning
for disadvantaged groups; –
A higher mobility of workers across Europe,
beneficial for economic growth. The realisation of the expected impacts
will depend on a number of factors such as the concrete implementation by
Member States of the recommended measures (Option 2) and the way in which
Member States will effectively work towards a European Quality Charter on
validation (Option 3). It has been assumed that the set of recommendations
addressed to Member States under Option 2 will have more immediate effects on
the creation of validation opportunities than the newly created OMC under
Option 3 which does not include a set of recommendations to Member States. Ongoing developments of National
Qualification Frameworks will benefit from the measures proposed under Option 2
which will be able to deliver concrete outcomes already in 2013. Immediate
effects are also relevant for reaching the Europe 2020 targets in time and
therefore expected immediate impacts received higher scores than impacts expected
in the longer term. The real costs of putting in place
validation mechanisms depend on a number of factors such as the readiness of
the current system (existing infrastructure: institutions, assessment and
certification procedures and standards), the scale of validation arrangements
(focus on all occupations or on specific occupations), and the target groups of
validation (all citizens or specific target groups). On the basis of available evidence, the
full costs for a validation procedure leading to a full or partial
qualification vary from 800 to 1,800 EUR depending on the country and the type
and level of qualification. Investment in validation of non-formal and informal
learning leads to cost savings on formal education and training for individuals
who will obtain a qualification on the basis of their learning obtained through
non-formal and informal learning, without the need for further formal education
and/or training. The resulting net costs of validation have
to be weighted against the benefits of validation. The impact assessment
assumed that in all three options the aggregate benefits of validation
altogether outweigh the net costs of validation in terms of e.g. improved
employability, enhanced career prospects, improved skill matching, more
economic growth, better social inclusion. 6. Comparison of options Option 2, a Council Recommendation on the
implementation of validation, results as the most effective and efficient
option. Option 2 is also the most coherent with EU policy objectives and with
the largest positive economic and social impacts. Under Option 1, the
current situation of validation is expected to change only slowly, implying
that the limited availability and use of validation of non-formal and informal
learning experiences, as well as the lack of a comparable and coherent approach
in validation across Europe, will remain. Option 3 (a new OMC)
is expected to lead to improvements compared to the baseline scenario regarding
impacts effectiveness, efficiency and coherence with wider EU policy
objectives. However the setting up a new OMC creates additional structures and
additional reporting mechanisms, increasing the administrative burden and costs
for the Member States. Moreover due to its exclusive reliance on the OMC method
there is more uncertainty as to the concrete action is taken by and in the
Member States as well as to the timeframe of such measures. Apart from impacts,
effectiveness, efficiency and coherence with EU policy objectives, the main
assets of Option 2 are: –
It will fill the "validation gap"
which currently exists within the available European tools and instruments such
as the EQF, Europass and credit systems. It will in particular fill the missing
link in the European Qualification Framework which provides for the promotion
of validation of non-formal and informal learning, without further guidance on
its implementation; –
It proposes concrete practical measures for
implementation of validation in the Member States; –
A Council Recommendation, as legal instrument, signals
the commitment of Member States towards the measures indicated, most of which
will require implementation at national level and adapted to the national
context; –
It explicitly involves relevant stakeholders
(labour market stakeholders, youth/voluntary organisations, education and
training institutions) in the development of validation systems; –
Member States will continue to cooperate within
existing OMC structures, in particular the EQF Advisory group, representing a
more simple implementation structure than foreseen under Option 3; –
It will form a new and stronger political base
for cooperation in the field of validation of non-formal and informal learning. 7. Monitoring and evaluation Under the initiative monitoring will take
place on the basis of the use of existing tools. This will limit its costs for monitoring
as well as the administrative burden to the Member States. The European Inventory on Validation, under
the responsibility of the Commission and of Cedefop, will be further
consolidated and strengthened in view of the monitoring the implementation of the
Council Recommendation by the Member States. The annual Cedefop report on the development
of national qualifications frameworks in Europe will be used for assessing the
progress achieved by Member States in creating validation of non-formal and
informal learning as a pathway to obtain a qualification. Member States will report on their implementation
of the Recommendation through their national progress reports already planned
in the context of the Education and Training Strategic Framework 2020 (next reporting
year: 2014). Finally the initiative foresees to
strengthen peer learning, involving governmental actors and stakeholders,
focussed on the exchange of experiences and demonstrations of good practice. Given
the close relationship between the initiative and the Recommendation on the
European Qualifications Framework, the EQF Advisory Group is the most
appropriate body for those activities An external evaluation of the
Recommendation's implementation is planned within four years after its adoption.