The progressive entry of new actors into the training offer, the availability
of a variety of sources of finance, and the necessary relevance that
is demanded of training programs are among the factors which have impinged
on the genesis of the modernization and transformation processes in
institutions. Currently, the processes of transformation and adaptation
to change are priority subjects on the training institutions agendas.
In a market which is diverse and which has numerous offers, the clients,
that is the users of training, have an increasing need to know which
the best offers are, that is to say, which provide the best guarantee
of quality. Both entrepreneurs and workers are seeking indications of
efficiency. Providers of financial resources are also interested in
the best use of funds invested in training. Institutions that are managed
with quality are a social guarantee of the efficiency of public expenditure
on training. The same logic can be applied to funds from the private
sector; they should reach organizations which can provide training processes
that are relevant, efficacious and efficient.
This is why vocational
training institutions are interested in improving the efficiency and
relevance of their activities, and recently this has been reflected
in the adoption of management mechanisms to ensure quality.
This trend is being expressed through the adoption of actions of direction
and participation in which tools are adopted and institutional action
to develop a culture of quality is executed. These activities, usually
immersed in the philosophy of continuous improvement or in institutional
modernization processes, involve training activity for personnel, the
search for critical factors, and clarification of the mission and objectives
which, in themselves, bring qualitative institutional improvements.
Some training institutions participate in national policies of quality
and work in association with national standardization and accreditation
organizations. This joint work is evident from the accreditation of
their technological development centers (ISO 17025) to render measurement
or testing services that are required to comply with the quality norms
for different products in national and international markets. Examples
of this are the national technology centers of the SENAI and the technological
development centers of the SENA.
Besides this, training and counseling is given to enterprises
for implementing quality control systems, a service which institutions
are offering more and more. This is also the case of the SENATI centers
of services for small and medium sized companies, which give training
with the emphasis on the improvement of quality.
At the same time the institutions have sought an external seal of
quality, and have had recourse to the guarantee of the certification
of quality audited and approved by an external organization, under
the ISO-9000 family of norms.
VTIs began activities for the management and the assurance of quality
in training institutions from the beginning of the 1990s in Europe,
and a little later in the Latin American region. The first institutions
implemented mechanisms for total quality management, and the majority
sought certification under the ISO 9000 norms. In this section, some
institutional experiences will be described,(1) and there will
be a review of the information gathered in a survey of the institutions
which have obtained quality certification in recent years.
The National Industrial Training Service (SENAI)in
Brazil had one of the first experiences in the region. There were antecedents
in the regional department of Santa Catarina with the application of
the 5 S
(2)
program, and subsequent recommendation for ISO-9000 certification followed
in 1997. The regional departments of Paraná (in 1997 the Paraná
Institute of Technology was the first vocational training school in
Brazil to obtain ISO certification) Besides that, the National Department
of the SENAI was certified with the ISO 9001 with application in planning,
the development and coordination of strategic projects, and operative
improvement projects.
The SENAI has antecedents in work towards the management
of quality:
- Participation
as coordinator of General Subprogram III of the Brazilian Program of
Quality and Productivity (PBQP) in 1992: The Education, Training
and Preparation of Resources.
- Member of the commission of General Subprogr
Since 1993, the SENAI has widely used an internal system of management
and recognition of the quality of its training centers which, after
an evaluation process, awards them the title of Model Centers
of Vocational Education or National Centers of Technology.
This system was inspired by the criteria of the National Program of
Quality, which includes process management, personnel management, leadership,
strategic planning, focus on the client and on the market, and results
and information management. It was made up of three progressive levels
of compliance with the criteria which, in ascending order, define the
categories: bronze, silver and gold.
In the SENAI work towards total quality, in 1993 the CENATEC (National
Technology Centers) national project set a model. Its central objective
was that technical schools should implant a model of quality management.
This was a project in the national ambit, and it had the following specific
objectives:
- Establish a strategic alliance between the SENAI and the different
social sectors linked to the productive sector, to raise the level
of technological training in the country.
- Form a network of poles of competency in the different technological
areas.
- Consolidate quality management in technical schools.
- Absorb, adapt and spread innovation and technology, leading to the
continual improvement of the teaching-learning process.
The process which went ahead under this program was aimed at meeting
the rigorous requirements of the national award of quality through the
following stages:
- Conception via
planning (strategic administration focused on planning)
- Implantation (total quality management)
- Evaluation (national quality award)
Afterwards, in 1996,
in the light of the success of the CENATEC process, the national department
of the SENAI developed another project for total quality management
in the learning schools. Its aim was to implant in the CEMEP (model
centers of vocational education) the principles of quality oriented
to training for work.
Since the mid 1990s, progress in the policy of institutional quality
has created a favorable climate for a number of regional departments
to undertake the process of quality certification.
Among the regional offices that have obtained quality
certification are Alagoas (AL), Amazonas (AM), Bahía (BA), Ceará
(CE), the Federal District (DF), Espíritu Santo (ES), Minas Gerais
(MG), Paraná (PR), Pernambuco (PE), Río Grande do Sul
(RGS), Río Grande do Norte (RGN), Santa Catarina (SC), Sao Paulo
(SP) and Sergipe (SE). In total, SENAI has more than 180 certifications
of quality. The majority are for training schools, others are for its
laboratories, and still others for the head offices of the regional
departments. Besides these, 35 certification process are under way.
It is worth noting
that the different regional offices participate in the definition and
establishment of a policy of quality in coordination with the actors
in the economic activity of the state in question.
In this way, SENAI assembles different management tools so as to construct
an organization which learns and is capable of day by day improvement
in its processes to foster better training, with the ultimate goal of
raising competitiveness and productivity of the Brazilian economy.
The National Rural Training Service (SENAR)
in its administration in Minas Gerais (established in 1993), has quality
of services rendered as one of its basic foundations. This is why it
implanted the SENAR total quality program. In this, a number of methodologies
were applied, including teamwork, strategic analysis, the 5 S,
the quality coffee, quality panels, and the journal of quality.
The processes involved were registered and made available to everyone,
and in this way it became an organization whose functioning was transparent.
In 1999, SENAR-MG acquired ISO 9002 1994 certification. Currently the
institution is preparing to receive the technical audit aimed at the
2000 version of ISO 9001 certification.
The National Training and Employment Service
(SENCE) in Chile was the first public service in that country to
obtain certification of quality of the ISO 9000 family. In January 2000,
it received the certificate of the Bureau Veritas Quality International
(BVQI), which accredited that the process of the constitution of technical
training organizations in the metropolitan region satisfies the
requirements of the ISO 9002 quality standards.
In April 2003, the National Training Service
(SENA) in Colombia obtained ISO 9001:2000 certification for three
of its training centers in the Antioquia regional office. These were
the National Construction Center, the National Wood Center, and the
National Footwear and Leather Manufacturing Center. Prior to this, the
sub management of planning in the same regional office had obtained
the ISO certificate. Within the framework of its strategic plan, the
institution has initiated the process which will lead to the certification
of its 114 training centers throughout the country, and its goal is
to achieve this before 2006. The SENA also gives counseling and technical
assistance to enterprises which apply for ISO certification.
The National Training Institute (INA)
in Costa Rica, one of the first institutions to initiate the process
of quality assurance, obtained ISO 9000 certification for its accreditation
unit (3) in June 1998. Follow up audits were
carried out in December of that year and in June 1999. This unit works
mainly on verifying the suitability of the training offer of various
outside institutions against the quality of the INA institutes
own offer. An institutional policy of the INA reads: Design and
execute programs and projects which allow the assurance of the quality
of the internal and external management of the services it offers to
staff and users.
The Technical
Institute for Training and Productivity (INTECAP) in Guatemala successfully
undertook the work to obtain quality certification under the 2000 version
of the ISO 9000 norm
and
this led to recommendation for certification in November 2002. Included
in the scope of the certified INTECAP quality management system are
Studies of labor markets, the design and development of training
by labor competency services, training services certifiable by the traditional
method developed in INTECAP centers and in companies, and also technical
assistance services.
In the current context of developing technological innovation, increasing
competitiveness, the globalization of productive economies, and the
progressive increase in the flexibility of the labor market and of labor
rotation, the INTECAP had to modernize to be able to cater adequately
to the productive sector in the area of human resources competency.
A notable characteristic of the INTECAP experience is the fact that
the certification of quality is part of a wide-ranging and successful
process of institutional modernization which was begun at the end of
1998 with the backing of the management council. The plan for modernizing
the institute consisted of the following:
- Definition of
a document of bases for the modernization of the INTECAP;
- Establishment of bases for organic restructuring: organigrams on
the level of unit, division and department;
- Schedule for initiating modernization.
The modernization
project incorporates the following orienting elements:
- Changes in the process, both of value and of support.
- Redefinition of the concepts of mission, vision and values.
- Redesign of the technical and administrative processes.
- Recognition of the importance of orienting the institution towards
total quality.
- Design and implementation of a horizontal organizational structure.
Besides all this,
the management of modernization revolves around seven sub processes:
1. Naming heads of divisions, units and departments, and also staff
who, in line with the organic law, have to be appointed by the management
council.
2. Preparation to establish a total quality culture.
3. Re-design of the main institutional processes.
4. Definition of the organizational structure and the pilot plan for
its implementation.
5. The administration of human resources.
6. Regionalization.
7. The consolidation of institutional image.
In February 2000, the Occupation Competency
Standardization and Certification Council (CONOCER) in Mexico was
certified with the ISO 9001 by Lloyds Register Quality Assurance
(LRQA) in recognition of its adoption of efficient systems which demonstrate
its capacity to assure the quality of its processes in the stages of
the design, development, production and distribution of its products,
and in the rendering of associated services.
Today, the CONOCER is thought of as the coordinator of a scheme whereby
people can accede to continuing training processes based on standards
that are set by agreement between the productive, labor and educational
sectors. It is in itself a quality body which aims at improving the
quality of the countrys enterprises, workers and training institutions.
In Peru, the National Service
of Occupational Training in Industry (SENATI) has received the ISO
9001 certificate of quality.
After
a wide-ranging national effort, the institution obtained certification
for its vocational training and preparation programs: dual learning,
the qualification of workers in service, industrial technicians, industrial
administrators, industrial teachers, technicians in engineering, continuing
training, multimedia training, computers, and its work package. Also
certified were the technical services of manufacturing and non destructive
testing, and counseling and consultancy for small and middle sized enterprises,
in its 41 area offices. In March 2003, SENATI obtained integrated certification
of the quality system and ambiental system ISO 9001:2000 and 14001:1996,
thus becoming the first institution in the region to achieve this for
its ambiental policy management
The road to ISO 9001 certification in the SENATI can be summed up in
three great events. After institutional restructuring between 1993 and
1998:
- Process of ISO 9001 certification between July 1998 and December
199
- Obtention of
ISO 9001 certification in the year 2000
- ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 certification in 2003

The main steps which SENATI took to obtain certification were:
- Agreement of the
National Council to implement the quality system
- Initial training of directors and heads about the ISO 9000 norm
- General training of all personnel using modular course design and a
clear evaluation system
- Approval of the quality policy by the National Council
- Definition of SENATI products and clients by National Management
- Setting up of work groups to prepare and revise the documents of the
system
- Training of internal auditors
- Approval of quality manual, and manual of organization and functions
and general directives, by the National Council
- Approval by the National Director of the control directive of the system,
quality plans and specific directives
- Internal audits in zonal headquarters
- Audit of pre-certification
- Audit of certification
One of the most demanding aspects of the road to quality assurance
is the definition and specification of processes, and this is even more
true when we consider that this is an institution that renders a training
service. This has led to an interesting institutional discussion about
the correct definition of the institutions products and clients.
Certification of theFORCEM quality system in
Spain
Since the end of the 1990s, the FORCEM, the institution in charge of
the subsystem of continuing training in Spain, has been promoting the
process of defining its quality system. With this aim, the training
of coordinators in areas related to the ISO 9002 norm has been undertaken.
After preparing the work schedule and the relation of the procedures
to be carried out, the work, which covered some 155 procedures, was
begun. The work of coordinating and unifying criteria, and control over
the progress of the project as a whole, was done in the department of
procedures and quality, management of organization and systems.
In September 1998, given FORCEMs range and responsibility in
the national ambit, the decision was taken to present its petition for
this certificate to AENOR.
This was considered an ambitious project, practically all the organizations
personnel participated in it, and in the end this was the main factor
in the success of the initiative. In June 1999 it obtained the certificate
of quality in line with the UNE-EN-ISO-9002 international norm.
1. This will not be an exhaustive list. The experiences
for which it has been possible to obtain information are included by
country.
2. Japanese management control system oriented to fostering
order and cleanliness. The 5 S are Seiri: Remedy; Serton:
Order; Seisou: Clean; Seiketsu: Maintain; Shitsuke: Discipline.
3. Awarded by INTECO and the AENOR (Spanish Standardization
and Certification Association) in line with the standards of the ISO-9002
norm.