Vocational education and training - VET
10.4K views | +0 today
Follow
Vocational education and training - VET
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Canadian Vocational Association / Association canadienne de la formation professionnelle
Scoop.it!

Denmark. Modeling Enrollment in and Completion of Vocational Education: The Role of Cognitive and Non-Cognitive Skills by Program Type

This study provides evidence of the importance of cognitive and non-cognitive skills to enrollment in and completion of three types of vocational training (VET): education and health, technical, and business. Math and language exam scores constitute the key measures of cognitive skills; teacher-assigned grades the key measure of non-cognitive skills.Estimation of completion proceeds separately by gender and VET type, controlling for selection and right censoring. The authors find that all skills are inversely related to VET enrollment, results that are robust to family-specific effects. Estimates for completion vary considerably by program type, demonstrating the methodological importance of distinguishing among different VET courses. While math scores are positively related to certification for all VET tracks, language skills are more important for the nontechnical track, and non-cognitive skills appear important only for the business track.
No comment yet.
Scooped by Canadian Vocational Association / Association canadienne de la formation professionnelle
Scoop.it!

On the measurement of competency

Canadian Vocational Association / Association canadienne de la formation professionnelle's insight:

Across multiple societal sectors, demand is growing to measure individual and group competencies. Unpacked following the assessment triangle (construct, observation, inference), competency measurement is exemplified by research from business, military and education sectors. Generalizability theory, a statistical theory for modeling and evaluating the dependability of competency scores, is applied to several of these examples. The paper then pulls together the threads into a general competency measurement model.
http://www.ervet.ch/pdf/PDF_V2_Issue1/shavelson.pdf

No comment yet.