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鲍狈贰厂颁翱鈥檚 Global Skills Academy convenes partners to set up action plan to support 10 million learners by 2029

Global Skills Academy meeting

鲍狈贰厂颁翱鈥檚 organised a partners鈥 meeting to present and define a common action plan on the path to supporting 10 million learners by 2029.

The meeting, which took place online on 8 February, gathered over 45 participants, including representatives from the private sector and international organizations, UNESCO and the UNESCO-UNEVOC network.

Borhene Chakroun, Director of the Division for Policies and Lifelong Learning Systems at UNESCO, opened the meeting by re-affirming that 鈥渆ducation is a master key for all the SDGs鈥, and the Global Skills Academy, through its network of partners, has great potential to innovate, collaborate, and continue to support young people as they transition into the labour market.

In order to achieve the mission鈥檚 target of economically and socially empowering 10 million young people with employability skills by 2029, priority should be given to promoting further collaboration, digital inclusion, and a demand-driven approach.

Collaboration on data and implementation

GSA partners further discussed the concrete contribution and impact that each one of them can bring to support the scale-up of GSA and the vision of the Global Education Coalition (GEC) more broadly. On the topic of data, partners suggested that more effort could go into a collaborative reflection on what the current data shows, what we can learn from it and what gaps still need to be addressed. These insights could be used for the tracking of learners and evaluation of impact on an international scale.

Promoting inclusion and diversity

In the discussion, the topic of inclusion was also raised, highlighting the need for more action to promote inclusion and diversity in this year鈥檚 action plan. For example, priority should be given to gender equality. This is a key guideline which needs to be carefully monitored to reach a 50-50 target. Overall, greater attention to inclusion would also support a more tailored and demand-driven approach to ensure every learner can benefit from the current trainings offered by GSA partners.

Activating a demand-driven approach

In line with the view of needing a stronger demand-driven approach, the question of 鈥淗ow can we find, measure and analyse the current skills鈥 demand in the labour market?鈥 was discussed. Carmen Lopez Ordo帽ez, Digital Product Manager for Employability and Educational Innovation at Fundaci贸n Telefonica, presented the organization鈥檚 , an interactive tool able to analyse and provide detailed information on job and skills鈥 demand with the use of Big Data. Ordo帽ez stated: 鈥淥ur goal is helping people to prepare more efficiently so they can get a job faster鈥 We monitor in real time all the job vacancies available, we analyze, and simplify all the information and offer it back to society鈥.

The partner roundtable and discussion served to clarify and guide the direction to be taken by the Global Skills Academy mission in 2023 and beyond, namely to promote collaboration, innovation and action on the path to supporting 10 million learners by 2029 and achieving SDG4.