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SKILLS DEVELOPMENT: A REAL-WORLD UPDATE

Published: Thursday, October 19, 2017

Education TrainingCommunity DevelopmentCurrent Affairs

The purpose of skills development is to facilitate access to and progression within career paths through high quality education and training. As the skills development arena continues to evolve, the reality of the skills crisis is becoming evident. Skills development is becoming a Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE) scorecard conversation, yet 7,2 million South African people are still illiterate, with new forms of illiteracy developing with every new workplace innovation.

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    Issued by Perfect Word Consulting (Pty) Ltd

    The purpose of skills development is to facilitate access to, mobility and progression within career paths through high quality education and training. As the skills development arena continues to evolve, the reality of the skills crisis is becoming evident. Skills development is becoming a Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE) scorecard conversation – yet 7,2 million South African people are still illiterate, with new forms of illiteracy developing with every new workplace innovation.

    The industry is hard-pressed to perform, with uncertainty about SETAs, the proliferation of professional bodies and increasing internal short courses, the value of education becomes ever more essential. According to Gizelle McIntyre, Director at The Institute of People Development (IPD), the National Skills Development Strategy (NSDS) III has been extended to March 2018. “The proposed landscape is a significant evolution in the institutional landscape and one which requires significant consideration and discussion amongst stakeholders.”

    To facilitate this, the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) published a draft proposed for a new National Skills Development landscape on the 10th of November 2015, to take effect on the 1st of March 2018. “Skills are required to fulfil company visions and strategies in the real world,” adds McIntyre. “Skills audits and needs analyses are of particular importance to design and implement the correct solutions, whether through training, coaching or mentoring. With effective workplace application, learning can result in improved performance and greater successes.”

    Particularly in Africa, scarce and critical skills are rife, as organisations and industries search for qualified and experienced people to fill particular roles or specialisations within the labour market. “With absolute demand for these scarce skills, suitably skilled people simply are not available. In some instances, candidates have the necessary skills but they do not meet employment criteria – this is known as relative demand,” advises McIntyre.

    The reality is that learning must address dual challenges – ensuring candidates have both the critical skills needed to deliver in demanding roles, and the necessary experience required to function effectively in the real-world workplace. “To achieve this, knowledge must be turned into action, with workplace integrated learning,” confirms McIntyre. “Constructive workplace learning shifts the individual from competence to proficiency. It is the highly individual foundation-stone of life-long learning, and results from engagement in practice.”

    The result of effective education and work-integrated learning is workplace readiness. “Work readiness is the transitional process from education or unemployment to valuable engagement in work processes,” states McIntyre. “A work ready individual possesses the foundational skills needed in order to engage in work processes, and develop the specific skills to become job fit.”

    To create a skills development landscape that meets real-world needs, the focus must be on bringing the ideals of the NSDS III, BBBEE and workplace requirements together. “For a productive, successful future, learning must be foundational, practical and reflexive,” concludes McIntyre.  

     

    For more information, please contact IPD at trainingenquiries@peopledev.co.za on (011) 315 2913 or visit www.peopledevelopment.co.za.

     

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    Founded in 1999, Workplace Skills Solutions t/a The Institute of People Development (IPD) strives to equip, prepare and certify practitioners to serve South Africa’s skills development strategy and facilitate the transformation of education and training. Over the years, IPD has become the preferred people development partner to most state owned and private enterprises in Southern Africa. IPD has assisted over 500 public and private training providers across most sectors of the economy to achieve or maintain accreditation through consulting, training and providing published guidelines.  For more information, please contact IPD at trainingenquiries@peopledev.co.za on (011) 315 2913 or visit www.peopledevelopment.co.za.