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Last update:
14/11/2008
Modernization in
Vocational Education and Training in the Latin American and the Caribbean
Region
Training and innovation, development and transfer of technology
processes
The most innovative experiences at the regional level on the subject of
training conceive the latter as part of a set of technology transfer
actions, both of labour and of production, adaptation and innovation.
This marks a turning point, both conceptual and methodological, in the
action of institutions, training centres and technological education
units.
In conceptual terms, these experiences are characterised by specialising
to a certain extent towards specific economic sectors (metal mechanical,
pulp and paper, leather and footwear, chemistry, construction, etc.),
which allows them, among other benefits, a greater degree of technological
updating of machinery, equipment and materials, although also regarding
knowledge and techniques applied to production. This updating, supplemented
by new strategies of approach to and co-operation with the productive
sector, is making it possible to offer a series of services which complement
the traditional supply of training.
Either as a conceptualisation prior to these changes, or as a practical
result thereof, what is certain is that there is also a change in the
notion of who the subjects are to which these units, services and centres
cater. If previously the main population catered to consisted basically
of individual workers, fundamentally young people, to whom it was sought
to transmit systematically a body of knowledge, abilities and skills
linked to an occupation, today these new experiences also conceive productive
units (firms of various sizes and characteristics), their productive
links and organisations, and the economic sectors themselves, as part
of their primary audience.
Moreover, there is an effort to cater to this new audience in a more
integral manner than in the past. Such are the cases of the National
Technology Centres, of the SENAI, and the Federal Technological Education
Centres, dependent on the Mid-level and Technological Education Secretariat,
of Brazil; the Technological Services Centres of SENA; the Technological
Nuclei of INA; as well as the activities offered to firms in Peru by
SENCICO and SENATI, so that they may access not only training and skills
development services, but also research and development, technical assistance
and consulting, or technological information services.
Although this diversification of institutional services includes as
a component a search for alternative financing, in many cases this is
only an emerging component. Its greater potential lies in the processes
of strengthening the updatedness, relevance and quality of the training
itself. The dovetailing in an appropriate environment of training and
education, labour and technology, enables mechanisms to be structured
by means of which there is an acquirement of, besides solid technical
and technological knowledge, the values, habits and behaviour inherent
to the competencies which present historical circumstances require of
workers, technicians and professionals.
A fundamental characteristic of this new conception of training, lies
in the incorporation of content and methodologies belonging to what
has been called "technological education." Briefly, this involves
recording, systematising, understanding and using the technology
concept, historically and socially constructed, to make of it an element
of teaching, research and extension, in a dimension that exceeds the
boundaries of simple technical applications: as an instrument of innovation
and transformation of economic activities, to the benefit of man as
worker and of the country.
Technology itself has exceeded today the purely technical dimensions
of experimental development or laboratory research; it encompasses issues
of production engineering, quality, management, marketing, technical
assistance, purchases, sales, inter alia, which transform it
into a fundamental vector of expression of the culture of societies.
It could be said that the technological process itself is, in and of
itself, an exercise in learning which modifies the way the world is
"seen", marked by theories, methods and applications. It is
also knowledge and maintains, therefore, the constant demands of the
"spirit of investigation" regarding the facts generated, transmitted
and applied. There then arises a need for closing the distance between
the conquests of scientific and technical knowledge and the knowledge
of those who apply the technologies, be they students, instructors,
researchists or workers, in order to inform them of their role in the
technical transformation of production and labour.
In the more integral conceptions in this regard that have been implemented
in the region, there has been a move away from the notions restricted
to skills upgrading, training and preparation of the labour force as
a function of the immediate needs of the labour market. On the contrary,
they seek to transmit to the worker different dimensions capable of
making him or her able to cope with the scientific-technological evolution
of the modern world and, in this manner, allow them to contribute their
intelligence, creativity and effort inside the productive unit.
A rough survey of what is happening in the region allows us to see,
on the one hand, that a goodly part of the training institutions, both
public and private, are dealing with the challenge of establishing a
closer link between the supply of training and the processes of innovation,
development and transfer of technology. However, on the other hand,
there is also a tendency for technological institutes and agencies related
to sectoral employer bodies to begin to deal simultaneously with the
subjects of technology and training and the development of human resources.
By way of illustration we present below some of the multiple and rich
experiences at present under way in the region which are proof of the
approaches we have mentioned.
The SENAI, in Brazil, is diversifying
significantly its institutional mission, broadening the boundaries
of its role as a vocational education institution and getting
to be acknowledged, also, as an instrument for the generation
and dissemination of technology. Technological incubators, islands
of technology of production integration and digital information
transportation systems are, inter alia, some of the institutional
initiatives designed to consolidate this function. The incubator
projects are considered means to accelerate modernisation, not
only by creating new firms, technological or not, but also to
rapidly surmount present structures that find it difficult to
introduce concepts imposed by present paradigms of the society
of knowledge. The basic proposal is to facilitate the long and
expensive voyage between the laboratory prototype and the head
of the industrial run. Thus the importance of a strengthened
infrastructure and of the activities associated with the support
provided by orchestration, marketing, trading and disclosure.
An incubator makes available to emerging firms physical space,
support services - telephone, fax, graphic reproduction, secretarial
services, administration, accounting support, computer support
- human resources, specialised services, training, technological
support, etc. The mechanisms of orchestration, training and
technological support developed by the SENAI serve to provide
a basis and training for employers so that they may be able
to face with greater security the obstacles which arise between
the world of research and entrepreneurial reality, where competition
-quality, productivity and price- is the factor that determines
success.
But perhaps one of the main strategies of the
SENAI is the model of the National Technology Centres. Conceived
on the basis of the certainty that an increase in productivity
and competitiveness on the part of industrial firms is conditioned
by investments in technology, these Centres become poles for
the generation, absorption, adaptation and transfer of technology,
and they work on adding value to the information.
The evaluation system to obtain the National
Technology Centre (Cenatec) Award was conceived on the basis
of the National Quality Award (PNQ), the structure of which,
in turn, is based on the "Malcolm Baldrige National Quality
Award." The Cenatec evaluation systems includes three different
versions:
i) A version used to grant the Award in the
Bronze Category, which is the simplified version of the PNQ,
the result of the reduction in the scope of the items included
in each of the seven evaluation categories: leadership, information
and analysis, strategic planning, development and management
of human resources, process management, business results, focus
on the client and the latters satisfaction.
ii) The evaluation system of the version used
to award the Silver Category is more complex and more extensive
since, besides increasing the level of requirements regarding
Quality Management, it also introduces Cenatecs items
of evaluation referring to Technological Content and its results,
with a minimum standard of points which must be achieved, as
well as the "Support Services" and "Facilitator
Effort" items.
iii) Finally, for the third version, the award
in the Gold Category, the PNQ Excellence Criteria are used,
in their present version, supplemented by the item referring
to Technological Content.
An attempt was therefore made to institute
a system for the evaluation of increasing complexity and demands,
with the aim of introducing in the SENAI units constant effort
to improve quality standards, without establishing, despite
this, schedules or obligatory participation in the three categories.
The National Technology Centres (Cenatec),
reciprocally with the productive sector, with the universitites
and with research institutions, exercise simultaneously the
functions of education, technical and technological assistance
and applied research. The SENAI includes today 45 Centres which
have already been certified, located in 11 states of the Federation,
in the southern, south-eastern and north-eastern regions of
the country, which perform in more than 20 technological areas.
The Centres train mid-level industrial technicians
at the same time as they provide practical technological extension
courses, consulting services to firms, dissemination of technological
information, quality certification and certification of experimental
development of products and processes, addressed to a sector
of industrial activity in their area of competence. However,
there are already pioneer activities where, through some Centres,
the SENAI makes inroads in higher education, as is the case
of its course in Textile Industrial Engineering.
The basic philosophy of action of the Cenatecs
contemplates a cross-section of disciplines, speed in the circulation
of technological information -with a strong presence of easy
accessible information systems- and flexibility in the use of
pedagogical instruments, programme contents and curricula, thought
out in terms of the constant interaction between technological
practices of firms and training activities.
On the basis of experience accumulated through
the Cenatecs quality evaluation and accreditation system,
the SENAI is also promoting a strategy of expansion to all its
operational units of the adoption of management excellence models.
In 1997, the certificate of "Vocational Education Model
Centre" (CEMEP) was created, conferred in the three categories
referring to SENAI units which stand out due to the quality
of their services. The expectation is that this system may become
an efficient instrument for improving quality standards and
operational performance in the majority of the units of the
institution. Their main aim is to develop programmes with innovative
teaching-learning methodologies and flexible curriculum organisation
suitable for the demands of life-long education, stressing the
integral training of the individual. But the CEMEP process,
besides being an innovation in vocational education, also seeks
to improve the quality of the technical and technological assistance
provided by the unit to its clients. Together with the International
Centre for Education, Labour and Transfer of Technology (SENAI/CIET)
and the National Technology Centres, the CEMEPs constitute
the National Technology Network of the SENAI.
The Inter-American Centre for Knowledge Development
in Vocational Training (ILO/Cinterfor)
Avda. Uruguay 1238 - Montevideo - Uruguay - Tel: (5982) 908 6023 - 902 0557
- 908 0545 - Fax: (5982) 902 1305
webmaster@cinterfor.org.uy