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Prosperity, employment and work

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The views represented here are those of the author and not necessarily those of the Commission

Thematic Paper

Work and Learning by Jenny Williams and Tom Wilson
The workplace is both a platform and a site for lifelong learning. As a result it has been present through the whole Inquiry into the Future for Lifelong Learning. This paper looks specifically at learning at or for work and relates it to the Inquiry’s theme of prosperity, employment and work. It has been written during the economic crisis at a time of rapid change in the economy, which has had profound implications for work and learning. The 2006 Leitch Review of Skills is our starting point.1 We broadly agree with the ambitions it sets out for the UK to become a world leader in skills by 2020: the UK’s success and future prosperity will depend on more of us having higher skills and the capability to put them to good use in an increasingly complex world. But we do not believe that an exclusive focus on improving the supply of skills is sufficient: more needs to be done to raise demand from employers for skills development, and to promote skills utilisation. We should re-focus the collective investment we currently make in learning for work to secure greater value from it, and over time, we will need stronger measures to increase that investment, if we are to make best use of all our talents.

Thematic Seminar

Workplace Learning: a summary of discussions at the expert seminar and Commissioner's meeting
This paper is a summary of the key issues raised during rich and wide ranging discussions at the Workplace Learning Expert Seminar on 21 November and the Commissioners’ meeting on 27 November. It is inevitably selective, but seeks to identify some of the main messages and challenges from the discussion and to highlight pointers for further research.

Adult Learning and Unions
The TUC’s submission to the NIACE inquiry focuses on the role of learning and skills at work and how developments in this area can best lead to an adult learning strategy that supports economic success, social justice and personal fulfilment.

Adult Learning in the Workplace - explaining current patterns and their outcomes
This submission argues that the ‘skills crisis’ that the Skills Strategy and the Leitch Review aim to resolve in reality does not exist (at least in the terms that public policy currently describes it). Despite this, or perhaps because of it, there is very little sign from the government that either the policy or the analysis that supports it is open for discussion and amendment.

Learning at work: towards more 'expansive' opportunities
Workplaces have always been sites of learning and every workplace creates its own unique version of a learning environment. In these environments, learning takes place in a range of different ways along a continuum that stretches from formalised activity at one end, through to a group of employees discovering the answer to a problem by informal discussion round the water cooler. This paper discusses the ways in which learning at work might be better organised and facilitated for the benefit of individuals and organisations, and as a contribution to lifelong learning.

Learning, Communities and Performance
This Report presents the main results to emerge from an innovative survey of the social context in which learning takes place and its impact on performance (known as the Communities of Practice Survey, CoPS). It is based on a survey of 1,899 employees interviewed about their relationships at work, their learning experiences and how they rate their own work performance.

Skills in Context (opens a new window)
The paper reviews the importance of skills in terms of explaining the moderate productivity performance of the UK.

Written Evidence Submitted

Follow the links below to read a selection of the written evidence submitted to the Inquiry in response to the call for evidence for this theme.

bulletSkills in Context
bulletTechno-mathematical Literacies in the Workplace: A Critical Skills Gap
bulletDeveloping and Delivering a Learning Strategy Corporate Research
bulletMerseylearn – building a learning culture at work
bulletLearning in the Workplace
bulletEarly career learning at work

Call for Evidence

Call for evidence on workplace learning
Closing date for evidence was 27 November 2007.

Papers on other Themes:
Demography and Social Structure
Well-Being and Happiness
Migration and Communities
Technological Change
Poverty Reduction
Citizenship and Belonging
Crime and Social Exclusion
Sustainable Development
The roles of the Public, Private and Voluntary Sectors

 

 

 

 

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