Learning to promote retention in apprenticeships and traineeships A/P Ros Brennan Kemmis AM Head, School of Education.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Managing Your Staff.
Advertisements

EU Presidency Conference Effective policies for the development of competencies of youth in Europe Warsaw, November 2011 Improving basic skills in.
Chapter 5 Transfer of Training
Chapter 1 Introduction to Organizational Behavior
Chapter 5 Evaluation, Feedback, and Reward of Individual Behavior
HOW TO FORM A PARTNERSHIP Training Unit 3.3 Characteristics of the mobility project networks: IVT, PLM, VETPRO.
Introduction to VET Quality Assurance in the UK Mark Novels 6 th December 2011 Quality Assurance in Technical and Vocational Education and Skills Study.
Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, Pathways to Strengthening and Supporting Families Program April 6, 2010 Division of Service Support,
0 - 0.
National Academy of Engineering of the National Academies 1 Phase II: Educating the 2020 Engineer Phase II: Adapting Engineering Education to the New Century...
SUBTRACTING INTEGERS 1. CHANGE THE SUBTRACTION SIGN TO ADDITION
Addition Facts
Vetting and Barring and the Independent Safeguarding Authority scheme UCET seminar 9 June 2008 Presented by: Peter Swift.
Raising standards, improving lives UCET annual conference Developing Inspection Christine Gilbert, HMCI 9 November 2009.
MSc in EFM – Management Week 2
ESF Working Arrangements 26 May 2011.
Higher Apprenticeship in Business & Professional Administration 19 October 2012 Anthea Hollist Research and Projects Officer.
Skills for Life Support Programme 1. Skills for Working Aims for the day The Skills for Life Support Programme is delivered on behalf of the Learning and.
Skills for Life Support Programme T: F: E: W: The Skills for Life.
Skills for Life Support Programme T: F: E: W: The Skills for Life.
Supporting managers: assessment and the learner journey
School Leadership that Works:
LASA VICTORIA Survey and Focus Groups. The Process Survey – Broad View 24 of 28 responses Overall satisfaction, 9 broad areas Included LASA VIC staff.
L EARNER VOICE IN VET & ACE: W HAT DO STAKEHOLDERS SAY ? Barry Golding and Annette Foley University of Ballarat 1.
Presenter: Beresford Riley, Government of
The Roles of a Sports Coach
The importance of the psychological contract for effective learning in apprenticeships Professor Erica Smith University of Ballarat Arlene Walker & Ros.
Effective Contract Management Planning
Evaluating administrative and institutional capacity building
Qualitative Indicator Prepared by Nyi Nyi THAUNG, UIS (Bangkok) Capacity Building Workshop on Monitoring and Evaluating Progress in Education in the Pacific.
How to commence the IT Modernization Process?
LEARNING & SKILLS COUNCIL – CONTEXT AND PRIORITIES 6 December 2007 Presented to South London Learning Partnership Main Board Meeting By Vic Grimes, Area.
Managing apprentices and managing PhD students Erica Smith University of Ballarat.
Ms Denielle Beardmore, Director of Nursing Clinical Education and Practice Development Ballarat Health Services, Ballarat Dr Debra Schulz, Director Allied.
JUGGLING PROFESSIONAL IDENTITIES: PERSPECTIVES OF A DEVELOPING RESEARCHER IN A STUDY ON SESSIONAL VET PRACTIONERS Natalie Jaques and Susanne Bahn AVETRA.
Domain 4: Professional Responsibilities
Appraising and Managing Performance (c) 2007 by Prentice Hall7-1 Chapter 7.
Employee Engagement Act, Engage, Measure Dale Kirk Thales Training & Consultancy.
Addition 1’s to 20.
Skills for Life Improvement Programme 1. Skills for Working Aims for the day The Skills for Life Improvement Programme is delivered on behalf of the Learning.
Test B, 100 Subtraction Facts
11 = This is the fact family. You say: 8+3=11 and 3+8=11
Week 1.
Principles of Marketing
1 Unit 1 Kinematics Chapter 1 Day
Retail Organization and Human Resource Management
Virtual University - Human Computer Interaction 1 © Imran Hussain | UMT Imran Hussain University of Management and Technology (UMT) Lecture 20 User Research.
The Framework for Teaching Charlotte Danielson 4c: Communicating with Families 1 6/12/201 3.
1 Flexible Learning Options FLO 2008 Department of Education & Children’s Services.
1 Laila Castaldo and Ilaria Savoini Brussels, 27 January 2015 “More and better jobs for young people in the commerce sector” Project submitted in relation.
New workplace savvy school students Erica Smith Charles Sturt University.
Insert photo here Successful Member Coaching & Supervision for Sub-Site Supervisors.
Workplace learning in context: How organisations and individuals intersect Professor Helen Rainbird, Birmingham Business Workplace learning and the role.
Occupational identity in Australian traineeships: An initial exploration Erica Smith, University of Ballarat Australia.
Why not consider hiring a young person with a disability?
Apprenticeship & traineeship demand and supply: Employers’ views Erica Smith (University of Ballarat) and Tony Bush (Charles Sturt University)
The changing nature of youth employment in Australia: How can this be understood? Professor Erica Smith University of Ballarat, Australia.
Combining formal, informal and non formal learning Josie Misko.
Traineeships Supporting young people into Apprenticeships and other jobs.
Introducing Australian Apprenticeships within the Spatial Information Industry ….important opportunities for Employers.
Copyright Texas Education Agency (TEA) Recruiter Career Important Terms and Definitions 1.
Rediscovering apprenticeships Professor Erica Smith University of Ballarat, Australia Co-Chair, International Network on Innovative Apprenticeship (INAP)
1 The Buddy Program: An initiative from the Office of the Dean of Students in the Division of Education, Arts & Social Sciences.
What are the features of high-quality traineeships? Erica Smith University of Ballarat VISTA conference 2008.
Background Focus of study tour : build on partnerships "unpack" training delivered by suppliers and manufacturers map to new Hairdressing National Training.
Wh Career development in employing organisations Practices and challenges from a UK perspective Wendy Hirsh Principal Associate, Institute for Employment.
ENTERPRISE ADVISERS FROM MICRO TO MACRO LEP Summit 20 October 2015 Jo Lappin & Kerry Senatore.
Engaging with employers in emerging economies: India A snapshot in 2012 and 2015 Professor Erica Smith, Federation University.
Promises and expectations between apprentices, trainees and their employers. Ros Brennan Kemmis AM Sharon Ahern Diane Middleton Charles Sturt University,
Presentation transcript:

Learning to promote retention in apprenticeships and traineeships A/P Ros Brennan Kemmis AM Head, School of Education

2 This presentation looks at the nature of the psychological contract between apprentices and employers, and focuses on the learning that helps to scaffold apprentices as they adjust to the culture and learning demands of new workplaces

Our Project Smith, E., Brennan Kemmis, R., & Walker, A.(2011) Understanding the psychological contract in apprenticeships/traineeships to improve retention. National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER). Adelaide. Funded by NCVER, running from late 09 late 10. From our original proposal, we were asked to strengthen the employer viewpoint and to add expectations about literacy and numeracy. Team members are Erica Smith (University of Ballarat) Ros Brennan Kemmis (Charles Sturt University) and Arlene Walker (Deakin University) 3

Research Method 4 Interviews with 13 stakeholders covering 10 organisations. Survey sent to 1000 apprentices and 1000 trainees. Survey sent to 2000 employers of apprentices/trainees. Additional survey to GTOs Case studies in 9-12 companies employing apprentices and trainees.

Whats the psychological contract? [An implicit contract between employer and employee] –It concerns mutual expectations and obligations –What happens when they differ? What happens when the contract is breached? –Common in the Human Resource Management literature, especially in the recent tight labour market. –In apprenticeships and traineeships there are extra parties eg GTOs, AACs. 5

6

Whats special about apprenticeships and traineeships? The psychological contract has extra partners: The RTO and (often) intermediaries such as AACs. GTOs in particular are an important third party. There is an expectation of learning, which is arguably greater than in normal employment 7

Some Findings 8 In all cases there were a number of core promises that remained consistent across apprenticeships/ traineeships, Industry areas and common to the GTOs. The provision of appropriate, relevant and good quality training formed a large part of the psychological contract, and was regarded as central to the effective operation of the psychological contract.

Important in both the on the job and off the job contexts. Training provided by the workplace was supervised, well planned and monitored either by the workplace supervisor or, in the case of the GTO s, by the Training Manager and the Field Officers and assessors. Both the apprentices and the trainees needed to have a variety of experiences and be exposed to a range of work opportunities. 9 Training

10

Case Study Findings Three dimensions to the psychological contract : 1.Teaching and learning 2.Employment conditions and 3.The emotional and interpersonal aspects of work. 11

Explicit acknowledgement of the mutual expectations, and constant re-iteration during advertising, recruitment, induction and performance management; Structured early intervention programs; Rewards and recognition to improve motivation; A fall-back position where someone can keep a job but abandon the apprenticeship; 12 Good Practice

Good Practice cont; Setting aside identifiable specific times and locations for training, rather than relying heavily on on-the-job training; Behind the scenes work between employers and intermediary bodies where appropriate. ie expectations among these groups (sometimes written down). These could be made explicit to apprentices and trainees; Field officers, either in GTOs or in larger companies. 13

Practice Architectures 14

An Example – The Hairdresser Hairdressers and teachers of hairdressing enter domains or practice-arrangement bundles within the overall project of hairdressing. IE: A hairdresser who is using foils to tip and tint hair has a specific set of discourses related to this activity, including discourses of the chemistry of dying, about clients sensitivities and preferences, and technical discourses describing the activities that compose tipping and tinting hair. 15

Hairdressing Continued; Her activities are enabled and constrained by the set-up of the salon, its tools and equipment, and its location in the neighbourhood. Her relationships are also enabled and constrained by social-political arrangements – with the owner, clients, clients friends and families, her own family, and the community and society within which they exist. 16

The hairdresser engages in the practices of hairdressing through sayings, doings and relatings that are shaped – enabled and constrained – by the arrangements or practice architectures that surround them. These practices have their basis in the sophisticated interplay between the practices themselves and their histories and their arrangements. 17

18 Learning in VET SocialPracticalEmotionalIntellectualDevelopmental Work place based Visceral

References Kemmis, S., & Grootenboer, P. (2008). Situating praxis in practice: Practice architectures and the cultural, social and material conditions for practice. In S. Kemmis & T. J. Smith (Eds.), Enabling praxis: Challenges for education. Rotterdam: SensePublishers. A/P Ros Brennan Kemmis Charles Sturt University 19