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Explore the complexities of acknowledging informal learning in French vocational education, focusing on experiential recognition through diplomas. Delve into issues around competence assessment, vocational practice status, and learning frameworks.
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Innovative Prüfungs- und Bewertungsverfahren in der Berfusbildung, Bonn, 14. Juni 2006 Acknowleding informal learning through diplomas Questions raised by the French system for acknowledgment of experiential learning Frank Billot, Céreq
Acknowleding experience • Relevance of the subject • The french system as a pretext • Assessing experience entails forming judgments by dealing with multiple references • The central question is that of the status of practice, activities and vocations in VET
The French system • Recognising experience by delivering a whole diploma without having to undergo formal training • On account of experiential learning acquired through work activities and others • Dossier and questions: not an exam, no justification, no suggestion or orientation • Institutions delivering diplomas in charge of the acknowledgment • A loose legal framework: learning should match competencies certified by the diploma as reference
A study of jurys’activities • Joint study with ENESAD over accounts of jury's discussions and dossiers’ structure • Hypothesis of an evaluation activity • Academic ressources • Referentials of activity, formation and competencies • Ressources from other domains • Technical, vocational, business, social,… • A fuzzy and uneasy activity of value ascribing: • How to define what value is, what has value
A predominant framework • Diploma and level of education as weltanschauung • The search for transversal competencies • Capacity to abstract the principles from specific situations • Dealing with situation classes rather than with specifics • Autonomy from local contexts and practices • Education’s implicit hierarchy: general and scientific education above all • Vocational education left with few means to describe its criteria autonomously from academic criteria • What room for vocations to express their expectations and build a reference framework ?
What’s the matter then ? • LLL context: emphasis on learning-performance link, innovation, change, adaptability • And beyond, emphasis on employability • Informal learning, in search of recognition and legitimacy: Something happens inside work that may matter for learning and organisational performance • Second chance ? What chances for the misfits of the education system if we use the same standards again ?
Why is there an informal learning problem ? • What does not work with education/formation systems ? • Why does it matter to actually practice ? • What does working together add up that education and training would not provide ? • Do they produce ‘competencies’ ? • Are their competencies in line with what one gets from experience ? • That which is valuable in professional action, can it be recognised through categories stemming from activities?
LLL in french context • Education: The noble side of learning, emancipation through knowledge, against utilitarism • Formation: Results and performance oriented, adaptation to the job, potentials’ development (HRM) • Learning: A forgotten dimension, the relation to action and situations • Education cannot be insulated from dealing and making sense of situations; it is not disembodied • Acting is not just ‘performing’, it means dealing concretely with situations and people, relating and making sense
The status of activity for learning • So what ? Beyond the french case… • The trend: less room as ever for activity • increasing dominance of general education ? • With EQF are we heading towards expertise levels or levels of education ? • operational level submitted to organisational and strategic levels • Beruf/métiers seen as an anachronism, a hindrance to flexibility and learning • …risks of loosing contact with the reality of activities
Questions on learning, situations • If learning is related to practice, and not merely to formal training (not to mention memorising abstract principles) • The conditions of practice are to be considered : work situations, collective settings • If competencies are linked to the practice of work situations • Being competent entails knowing how to make sense of situations, • Learning outcomes should take in account the ways people understand and deal with situations and should not be reduced to tasks • If situations are not determined by their technical features • Because they entail understanding what is at stake in a social context and learning how to handle things and people • Because they are socially defined, as are performance expectations or legitimate practices
…and collectives • If, thus, intelligence of situations is developped among collectives • making collective practices the repository for professional standards, • And the locus where professions can be maintained, re-produced and developed…
Then… • Cultures developed among vocations are the condition for the development of competencies and of organisational performance • Work in local settings contributes to the structuration of professional behavior • it is specific, workers are not interchangeable units • The shopfloor is the natural locus where to define competencies • Competencies cannot be measured as objects, rather evaluated against collective and diverse expectations • The main challenge is to find ways to articulate local and vocational understanding and handling (practices) of situations
At the crossroads of work and training • in the realm of activity, from where learning stems • A need for recognition beyond organisational limits • Notably with regards to employability and mobility • Which requires a social framework • Provided by education systems, through diplomas as central references
Food for thought • This is not a detailed presentation of the french system • It is a local system inscripted in a national framework • Maybe disappointing regarding its formal characteristics • An exemplary case