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This book discusses how the Dutch vocational education system has
undergone significant waves of reform driven by global imperatives,
national concerns and governmental policy goals. Like elsewhere,
the impetuses for these reforms are directed to generating a more
industry-responsive, locally-accountable and competence-based
vocational education system. Each wave of reforms, however, has had
particular emphases, and directed to achieve particular policy
outcomes. Yet, they are more than mere versions of what had or is
occurring elsewhere. They are shaped by specific national
imperatives, sentiments and localised concerns. Consequently,
whilst this book elaborate what constitutes the contemporary
provision of vocational education in the Netherlands also addresses
a broader concern of how vocational education systems become
formed, manifested within nation states, and then are transformed
through particular imperatives, institutional arrangement and
localised factors. So, the readers of this book whilst learning
much about the Dutch vocational education system will also come to
identify and engage with a selection of contributions that inform
factors that situate, shape and transform vocational education
systems. Such a focus seems important given an era when there are
concerns to standardise and make uniform educational provisions,
often for administrative or political imperatives. As such, this
book will be of interest not only to those who are engaged in the
field of vocational education, but those with an interest in
educational policy, practice and comparative studies.
This book discusses how the Dutch vocational education system has
undergone significant waves of reform driven by global imperatives,
national concerns and governmental policy goals. Like elsewhere,
the impetuses for these reforms are directed to generating a more
industry-responsive, locally-accountable and competence-based
vocational education system. Each wave of reforms, however, has had
particular emphases, and directed to achieve particular policy
outcomes. Yet, they are more than mere versions of what had or is
occurring elsewhere. They are shaped by specific national
imperatives, sentiments and localised concerns. Consequently,
whilst this book elaborate what constitutes the contemporary
provision of vocational education in the Netherlands also addresses
a broader concern of how vocational education systems become
formed, manifested within nation states, and then are transformed
through particular imperatives, institutional arrangement and
localised factors. So, the readers of this book whilst learning
much about the Dutch vocational education system will also come to
identify and engage with a selection of contributions that inform
factors that situate, shape and transform vocational education
systems. Such a focus seems important given an era when there are
concerns to standardise and make uniform educational provisions,
often for administrative or political imperatives. As such, this
book will be of interest not only to those who are engaged in the
field of vocational education, but those with an interest in
educational policy, practice and comparative studies.
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