|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
To stimulate economic advancement, low- and middle-income countries
need well-educated and trained workforces to fill the types of
skilled jobs that drive economic growth. Improving educational
quality and attainment and providing better training are all
rightly put forth as policy recommendations to leverage economic
growth and job creation. However, new findings based on large scale
surveys of adult skills from the World Bank Group's STEP (Skills
toward Employment and Productivity) Skills Measurement Program
suggest that many workers are overqualified for their current jobs
(based on the education those jobs require). The results of this
study suggest that countries may not reap as much benefit from
their investments in quality education and training if weak job
creation leaves workers' skills underutilised. Most of the
literature on mismatch focuses on higher-income countries and rates
of over-education among college graduates. Accounting for Mismatch
in Low- and Middle-Income Countries uses new STEP Skills Survey
data from 12 low- and middle-income countries, representing a range
of economic and educational and training climates, to better
understand the scope and patterns of education and skills mismatch.
STEP collects information not only on workers' level of education
and employment status, but also on the types, frequency, and
durations of tasks they carry out at their jobs as well as some of
the cognitive skills they use. The study also explores additional
factors such as gender, health, career stage, and participation in
the informal labor sector that may help explain the degree of
mismatch rates. The study's findings indicate that over-education
is common in low and middle income countries with both lower and
higher rates of educational attainment. There is also evidence that
over-educated tertiary workers do not use all of their skills,
potentially wasting valuable human capital and educational
resources. Aimed at policy makers, business and education leaders,
and employers, Accounting for Mismatch in Low- and Middle-Income
Countries suggests that job growth must go hand-in-hand with
investments in education and training.
This publication provides an overview of the impacts of
socio-emotional skill development programmes in developed and
developing countries, including findings from evaluations of early
childhood, and in-school and out of school programmes. The findings
highlight characteristics and impacts of successful (and less
successful) programmes.
Empirical research has found that entrepreneurial activity
correlates positively with innovation and job creation, and
governments around the world have shown a growing interest in
interventions that promote entrepreneurial success. However,
research on whether entrepreneurial success can be taught has
reached mixed conclusions, and even the landscape of what is being
taught is poorly known. This study looks closely at entrepreneurial
education and training (EET) programs in three case study countries
in Africa - Kenya, Ghana, and Mozambique - which are all
experiencing sustained economic growth and diversification in their
private sectors. It draws on both global and country-specific
research and on the experience of stakeholders in the case
countries. The study identifies practical insights relevant to
various target groups, intended outcomes, and social and economic
contexts. Overall, it paints a comprehensive picture of both the
context for entrepreneurship and the landscape of programs in the
case countries. Among its key findings are these: (i) Key
macroeconomic trends give reason for optimism about the trajectory
of private sector development, but serious barriers to
entrepreneurship remain in each country. Corruption, prohibitively
high taxes, and burdensome regulatory regimes remain impediments,
along with crime. Stakeholders interviewed (potential and
practicing entrepreneurs) also cite cultural disincentives and lack
of access to finance. (ii) The EET program landscape is highly
varied. The programs often emerge as responses to urgent
challenges, such as urban youth unemployment, but in the aggregate
they target a wide range of learners, from secondary students to
university business majors to rural women, and their focus ranges
from poverty reduction to attitudinal change. (iii) Too many
programs are insufficiently tailored to their participants'
backgrounds and needs, attempting to use a single curriculum with
participants of varying ages, educational backgrounds, and
expectations. (iv) Whereas stakeholders believe business acumen and
an entrepreneurial mindset are key to business success, few
programs address this. (v) Finally, stakeholders express a strong
desire for more business community mentorship and for better access
to finance; these are areas that some programs do address, and with
positive results, but much more is needed. The findings in this
report can inform EET policy and program dialogue at multiple
levels, guiding the investment decisions that policymakers and
government institutions must make and more clearly indicating where
further research in the EET realm is most needed.
Entrepreneurship has attracted global interest for its potential to
catalyze economic and social development. Research suggesting that
certain entrepreneurial mindsets and skills can be learned has
given rise to the field of entrepreneurship education and training
(EET). Despite the growth of EET, global knowledge about these
programs and their impact remains thin. In response, this study
surveys the available literature and program evaluations to propose
a Conceptual Framework for understanding the EET program landscape.
The study finds that EET today consists of a heterogeneous mix of
programs that can be broken into two groups: entrepreneurship
education and entrepreneurship training. These programs target a
range of participants: secondary and post-secondary education
students, as well as potential and practicing entrepreneurs. The
outcomes measured by program evaluations are equally diverse but
generally fall under the domains of entrepreneurial mindsets and
capabilities, entrepreneurial status, and entrepreneurial
performance. The dimensions of EET programs vary according the
particular target group. Programs targeting secondary education
students focus on the development of foundational skills linked to
entrepreneurship, while post-secondary education programs emphasize
skills related to strategic business planning. Programs targeting
potential entrepreneurs generally are embedded within broader
support programs and tend to target vulnerable populations for whom
employment alternatives may be limited. While programs serving
practicing entrepreneurs focus on strengthening entrepreneurs
knowledge, skills and business practices, which while unlikely to
transform an enterprise in the near term, may accrue benefits to
entrepreneurs over time. The study also offers implications for
policy and program implementation, emphasizing the importance of
clarity about target groups and desired outcomes when making
program choices, and sound understanding of extent to which
publicly-supported programs offer a broader public good, and
compare favorably to policy alternatives for supporting the
targeted individuals as well as the overall economic and social
objectives."
The World Bank created this Early Child Development (ECD) Guide in
response to a growing demand from Task Team Leaders (TTLs) for
advice and support to facilitate the policy dialogue on the topic
of ECD and to help policy makers make and implement relevant
choices on how to best invest in ECD in the context of their
country's economy and national priorities. This Guide fills a gap
in the literature by (i) distilling existing information in a
user-friendly format, (ii) providing practical information on
topics that have recently become particularly relevant in ECD
(e.g., measuring child development outcomes through the
identification and adaptation of relevant instruments, conditional
cash transfers for families with young children, etc.), and (iii)
assessing the quality of the latest evidence on each topic and
identifying the knowledge gaps/remaining questions for which
additional experimentation and evaluation are required. This Guide
is designed as a series of short notes (approximately 6-8 pages
each), clustered into thematic sections: (i) Initiating the policy
dialogue: Why invest in ECD? (3 notes); (ii) Assessing needs,
measuring outcomes, and establishing policy frameworks (2 notes);
(iii) "Strategic entry points" for ECD investments (4 notes); and
(iv) Costing and financing (2 notes). The notes are summarize the
main debates in the field. Each note is designed to be read
independently, so information is sometimes repeated or
cross-referenced across notes.
La Banque mondiale a redige ce guide du developpement de la petite
enfance (DPE) pour repondre a la demande croissante de conseil et d
appui des responsables de programmes en matiere de dialogue
politique sur le theme du DPE, et pour aider les clients a prendre
et a mettre en oeuvre des decisions pertinentes sur la meilleure
maniere d investir dans le DPE dans le cadre de leur economie et de
leurs priorites nationales. Ce guide comble un manque dans la
litterature actuelle sur le sujet (1) en distillant l information
existante sous la forme de notes concises et faciles a utiliser;(2)
en fournissant une information pratique sur les dernieres questions
pertinentes relatives au DPE, telles que la mesure des resultats du
developpement des enfants grace a l identification et l adaptation
d instruments efficaces, aux transferts monetaires conditionnels
destines aux familles de jeunes enfants, et autres; et (3) en
evaluant la qualite des derniers faits rapportes pour chaque sujet
et en identifiant les lacunes en matiere de connaissances pour
lesquelles des experimentations et evaluations complementaires sont
necessaires."
Volume 1. This Sourcebook aims to support efforts by countries to
strengthen the role of the education sector in the prevention of
HIV/AIDS. It was developed in response to numerous requests for a
simple forum to help countries share their practical experiences of
designing and implementing programs that are targeted at school-age
children. The Sourcebook seeks to fulfill this role by providing
concise summaries of programs, using a standard format that
highlights the main elements of the programs and makes it easier to
compare the programs with each other. A Sourcebook of HIV/AIDS
Prevention Programs documents 13 education based HIV/AIDS
prevention programs targeting children and youth from 7 sub-Saharan
African countries. It is sponsored by UNAIDS, UNICEF, UNESCO,
UNFPA, DFID, USAID, Ireland Aid and the World Bank. The Sourcebook
represents the work of many contributors (acknowledged in the
book), and was developed by the Partnership for Child Development
with the World Bank, with principal support from Ireland Aid and
the Norwegian Education Trust Fund.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
|