World Youth Skills Day 2021
World Youth Skills Day 2021 will again take place in a
challenging context due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
- UNESCO estimates that schools
were either fully or partially closed for more than 30 weeks between March
2020 and May 2021 in half the countries of the world. In late June, 19
countries still had full school closures, affecting nearly 157 million
learners. And 768 million more learners were affected by partial school
closures.
- Respondents to a survey of
technical and vocational education and training (TVET) institutions
jointly collected by UNESCO, the International Labour Organization (ILO)
and the World Bank reported that distance training had become the most
common way of imparting skills, with considerable difficulties regarding,
among others, curricula adaptation, trainee and trainer preparedness,
connectivity, or assessment and certification processes.
- ILO estimates show that
globally, youth employment fell 8.7 per cent in 2020, compared with 3.7
per cent for adults, with the most pronounced fall seen in middle-income
countries. The consequences of this disruption to the early labour market
experiences of youth could last for years.
World Youth Skills Day 2021 will pay tribute to the
resilience and creativity of youth through the crisis. Participants will take
stock of how TVET systems have adapted to the pandemic and recession, think of
how those systems can participate in the recovery, and imagine priorities they
should adopt for the post-COVID-19-world.
Why is World Youth Skills Day important?
In 2014, the United Nations General Assembly declared 15 July as
World Youth Skills Day, to celebrate the strategic importance of equipping
young people with skills for employment, decent work and entrepreneurship.
Since then, World Youth Skills Day events have provided a unique opportunity
for dialogue between young people, technical and vocational education and
training (TVET) institutions, firms, employers’ and workers’ organizations,
policy makers and development partners. Participants have highlighted the
ever-increasing significance of skills as the world is embarking on a
transition towards a sustainable model of development.
What role do technical and vocational
education and training play?
Education and training are central to the achievement of
the 2030 Agenda. The vision of the Incheon
Declaration: Education 2030 is fully captured by Sustainable
Development Goal 4 “Ensure inclusive and equitable quality
education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all”. Education 2030
devotes considerable attention to technical and vocational skills development,
specifically regarding access to affordable quality Technical and Vocational
Education and Training (TVET); the acquisition of technical and vocational
skills for employment, decent work and entrepreneurship; the elimination of
gender disparity and ensuring access for the vulnerable. In this context, TVET
is expected to address the multiple demands of an economic, social and
environmental nature by helping youth and adults develop the skills they need
for employment, decent work and entrepreneurship, promoting equitable,
inclusive and sustainable economic growth, and supporting transitions to green
economies and environmental sustainability.
TVET can equip youth with the skills required to access
the world of work, including skills for self-employment. TVET can also improve
responsiveness to changing skill-demands by companies and communities, increase
productivity and increase wage levels. TVET can reduce access barriers to the
world of work, for example through work-based learning, and ensuring that
skills gained are recognised and certified. TVET can also offer skills
development opportunities for low-skilled people who are under- or unemployed,
out of school youth and individuals not in education, employment and training
(NEETs).