This policy briefing concerns vocational school self-assessment. School self-assessment is builds the school staff’s awareness of the challenges and opportunities confronted, and identifying possibilities for change to address these challenges and enhance performance.
ETF Policy Briefing: Vocational School Self-Assessment Turning Schools into Learning Organisations
1. ISSUE 10 JANUARY 2012
VOCATIONAL SCHOOL SELF-ASSESSMENT
TURNING SCHOOLS INTO LEARNING ORGANISATIONS
This policy briefing builds on the THE PROCESS IN THREE STEPS practical terms, self-assessment
experience of the European Training follows a similar logic in all the schools
Foundation’s (ETF) Community of What is a vocational school in which it is implemented. It is a
Practice in Quality and Quality process of looking at specific areas
1 self-assessment? Cedefop (2011)
Assurance . Between 2009 and 2011 a and collecting evidence about the
number of activities were implemented provides the following definition:
school’s performance in these fields,
in the ETF regional mutual learning measuring how quality has been
programme. The community of ‘Any process or methodology
2 carried out by a VET provider under achieved. It looks at three areas:
practice was used for knowledge-
3
sharing across participating countries . its own responsibility, to evaluate
its performance or position in + What are the challenges and
The main objective was to create a
network for policymakers and relation to two dimensions: an opportunities for the school?
vocational education and training (VET) internal dimension (“micro level”)
experts, and to enable the exchange of that covers services, internal staff, + How well is the school doing?
information and experience, debate and beneficiaries or clients, policy
mutual learning on quality assurance in and/or internal organisation, + How can the school be improved?
VET. To facilitate the work, the ETF development plan, etc.; and an
applied the key characteristics of policy external dimension (“macro level”) In other words, a vocational school
learning while the ‘learning platform’ that covers analysis of the self-assessment is concerned with
focused on quality in VET. educational offer of this institution building the staff’s awareness of the
compared to others: relationship challenges and opportunities confronted,
Through four face-to-face peer learning with the territorial system of actors and identifying possibilities for change
meetings which took place in Italy (local decision-makers, unions, local to address these challenges and
(May 2009), Turkey (November 2009), governments, type of labour market enhance performance
Hungary (September 2010) and and needs of VET, information
Montenegro (September 2011), a network, type of populations
workshop was organised to brainstorm interested in a learning offer and
and discuss the most recent evolution of the needs, main
developments in VET, such as policies results of work at national and
for quality including the role of key European levels in the VET sector).’
indicators, self-assessment in
vocational schools and links with This conception of vocational school
external evaluation. A number of peer self-assessment provides an
sessions were held in which opportunity to evaluate a range of
community members could reflect on, factors that influence the performance
critique and summarise major issues of the school. Many factors are
and draw conclusions. These findings internal, while others are external,
will be useful for policymakers such as VET policies, developments in
concerned with quality in VET, and who the labour market and the
are considering vocational school attractiveness of the vocational profiles
self-assessment as a policy choice for offered, as well as the availability of
the transformation of schools in their job placements – all of which have an
photo: ETF/A. Jongsma
country impact on quality.
Vocational school self-assessment is a
process that starts with a set of
criteria against which the school can
measure its performance. In more
1
This community includes representatives from education ministries, VET agencies and vocational schools, as well as education inspectors and social partners.
2
A ‘community of practice’ is a learning forum where motivated and skilled participants share their experiences of a specific practice and then work together to improve
that practice. In doing so they mutually develop new procedures, models and tools that they will go on to share with the wider community (Wenger & Snyder, 2001).
For more information on the ETF’s use of communities of practice, see Nielsen (2011).
3
Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Kosovo (so-called without prejudice to position on status, and in line with
UNSCR 1244 and the ICJ Opinion on the Kosovo declaration of independence – hereinafter ‘Kosovo’), Montenegro, Serbia and Turkey.
2. THE FOCUS OF QUALITY complete and comprehensive self- quality in VET is the Agency for VET and
assessment should be carried out. There Adult Education.
IMPROVEMENT POLICIES are three institutions in Montenegro in
The nature and extent of the challenges charge of quality in education: the Bureau In Albania, the piloting of vocational
in turning a vocational school into a for Educational Services, the Examination school self-assessment, led by the
learning organisation are also dependent Centre and the VET Centre. The VET National Agency for VET, started in 2010.
on the goals that a particular policy, or Centre, through its Evaluation Bosnia and Herzegovina is in the process
set of policies, sets out to achieve. Department, is in charge of the external of strengthening its education
Experience with policy implementation evaluation of vocational schools. institutions, and various reforms are
suggests that there are some education According to its methodology for quality targeting quality in schools. Kosovo has
goals which are more difficult to realise evaluation, VET Centre advisors assess initiated VET quality improvement
than others, and which are likely to meet each school’s achievement of standards reforms, with a focus on measuring
with more resistance from the school- in the key areas and prepare a report, school performance based on a set of
level actors who have to put them into describing the situation in the school and indicators. Quality improvement in
practice. Therefore, it is important to providing recommendations. On this vocational schools though the
consider the diverse ways in which policy basis, the school prepares a plan for introduction of a number of quality
goals present implementation challenges quality improvement over a period of four standards is an important policy in
(Sultana, 2008).There are a number of years. The report is submitted to the Serbia.
similar developments throughout the Ministry of Education and Science and 4
countries of the region which, to a Educational Inspection. In Turkey, total quality management
significant extent, integrate vocational (TQM) is used in vocational schools. The
school self-assessment into their In Croatia, quality is one of the main Ministry of National Education initiated
education and training policies. issues in education and training policy. its implementation back in November
As a principle it is enshrined in both 1999, through the adoption of the
In the former Yugoslav Republic of strategic and legal documentation. so-called Total Quality Management
Macedonia, the government strategy for While the Act on Primary and Secondary Implementation Directive (MoNE, 1999).
education identifies three priority areas Education regulates the external TQM is not compulsory for all schools.
for policy action: decentralisation, evaluation and self-assessment of However, in order to motivate schools to
improving the quality of education and primary and secondary schools, the VET be involved in quality development
promoting social inclusion and cohesion. Act, adopted in February 2009, regulates processes, the ministry introduced an
Since the school year 2008/09 vocational the external evaluation and award for quality in education, based on
school self-assessment as an approach self-assessment of vocational schools. criteria published in the Manual of Award
to quality has been compulsory by law. Hence, all vocational institutions are for Quality in Education. TQM
At the heart of the process are seven obliged to conduct a self-assessment, implementation at school level starts
5
priority areas: teaching plans and followed by an external evaluation (VET with vocational school self-assessment .
programmes; student achievements; Act, Art. 11). The key institution Self-assessment reveals the ‘strengths’
teaching and learning processes; support responsible for the development of and ‘improvable aspects’ of the school.
to students; school climate; school
resources; and issues of leadership and
management. A number of quantitative
and qualitative indicators have been
developed for measuring quality. Based
on the self-assessment process, the
vocational school prepares a report,
which is the starting point for a
comprehensive evaluation of the school.
In Montenegro, recent changes in
education legislation favour vocational
school self-assessment as a tool for
quality development, linking it with
external evaluation. According to the
General Law on Education, which came
into force in August 2010, maintaining
and improving the quality of vocational
school work should be done through
photo: Purdue
self-assessment: each year an
assessment should be conducted in
several areas of education and training
services, and every two years a
4
According to the main principle of TQM, quality does not depend on the control of the product after its production, but rather on continuous improvement, which is
built into different organisational processes. In the case of vocational schools these processes will refer mainly to teaching and learning, and communication with
stakeholders.
5
In the case of TQM in vocational schools in Turkey, the so-called Excellence Model developed by the European Foundation for Quality Management (EFQM) has been
applied as a basis for the continuous improvement of those areas of concern that emerge from the self-assessment process.
4. ISSUE 10 JANUARY 2012
TOWARDS VOCATIONAL communities as a result of the assessment. supported by quantitative and qualitative
Results are verifiable: improved student analyses, can reinforce the benefits for
SCHOOLS AS LEARNING achievements, better school leadership, individual schools. Potentially, this can
ORGANISATIONS improved accountability and greater provide a good balance between top-down
satisfaction among employers. However, steering and bottom-up implementation.
For VET policymakers, one of the key
‘neither external nor internal strategies will
priorities is to create the right conditions for In recent years the idea of the school as a
impact upon the progress of students,
the development of quality in vocational ‘learning organisation’ has been on the
unless the strategy itself impacts at the
schools. International literature suggests agendas of various EU school development
same time on the internal conditions or
that one of the most important factors for projects. This concept appears to promote
change capacity of the school. [… If]
success is finding the right balance principles that will be in demand in the
continual improvement is to be taken
between bottom-up school improvement future. It aims to develop organisations that
seriously, then the focus […] needs to be
and top-down policy steering. In a top-down continuously change and develop and are
on the school’s capacity for development.
approach the main drivers are government- able to systematise and evaluate their
“Real” school improvement strategies
level ministries and institutions, as well as experience, making learning an ongoing
therefore need to be context-specific, both
legislation and decrees. The bottom-up process. In a team-based organisation there
in terms of the learning needs of students
approach regards vocational schools as the is a direct connection between the ‘learning
and the organisational conditions of the
focal point for policy implementation. team’ and the ‘learning organisation’.
school’ (Hopkins, 2001, p. 160, emphasis in
Beyond achieving quality in individual A team can assemble, elaborate on and
original).
schools, for policymakers the biggest assess pedagogical experience in a more
challenge is ensuring that schools in From the point of view of usefulness in VET subtle and complex way than is possible for
general achieve quality in their operations. policy making, self-assessment can help to the individual teacher (Nielsen, 2011).
ensure comparability between schools and Vocational school self-assessment could be
During three years of mutual learning in the can provide important information for helpful in this respect
ETF community of practice, emphasis was identifying weaknesses and assessing
placed on self-assessment to support which schools are benefiting from specific
quality, with the aim of eventually turning policy actions. A common approach to
schools into learning organisations. school quality means that it is easier to
Furthermore, through self-assessment, identify, understand and find ways of
vocational schools are seeking ways of addressing differences.
involving their various stakeholders, not
only in planning and implementation, but Self-assessment in itself is not sufficient,
and some kind of external monitoring of
photo: Fotolia
also in the review process.
schools’ performance is necessary. A policy
Potentially, this approach leads to schools framework for quality in schools combining
that could offer diversified and multi- self-assessment and external evaluation
learning services to students and with review and improvement processes,
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Cedefop (European Centre for the Development of Vocational Eastern Europe, Publications Office of the European Union,
Training), Glossary: quality in education and training, Publications Luxembourg, 2011.
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EQARF (European Quality Assurance Reference Framework), see countries: between dreams and reality’, ETF yearbook 2007 –
http://ec.europa.eu/education/lifelong-learning- Quality in vocational education and training: modern vocational
policy/doc1134_en.htm training policies and learning processes, Office for Official
ETF (European Training Foundation), ‘Country reports – Albania, Publications of the European Communities, 2007 .
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, former Yugoslav Republic of Okay, Ş., ‘Effects of total quality management applications on the
Macedonia, Kosovo, Montenegro and Turkey’, ETF community of communication between the stakeholders in vocational and
practice country team, Turin, May 2011 (unpublished). technical secondary education’, Faculty of Technical Education,
Fullan, M., The new meaning of educational change, Teachers College Pamukkale University, Denizli, 2010.
Press, New York, 2001. Oldroyd, D. and Nielsen, S. (eds), European Training Foundation,
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Honig, M.I., ‘Complexity and policy implementation: challenges and Senge, P .M., Cambron-McCabe, N., Lucas, T., Smith, B., Dutton, J.
opportunities for the field’, New directions in education policy and Kleiner, A., Schools that learn: a fifth discipline fieldbook for
implementation: confronting complexity, State University of educators, parents, and everyone who cares about education,
New York Press, Albany, 2006. Doubleday, New York, 2000.
Hopkins, D., School improvement for real, RoutledgeFalmer, London, Sultana, R.G., European Training Foundation, The challenge of policy
2001. implementation: a comparative analysis of vocational school
MoNE (Ministry of National Education), ‘Total Quality Management reforms in Albania, Kosovo and Turkey – Peer learning 2007, Office
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‘LEARN’: horizontal learning in a community of practice in South Learning, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 2001
HOW TO CONTACT US For other enquiries, please contact: Prepared by Margareta Nikolovska, ETF
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