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This paper analyses how digital skills are embedded in initial vocational education and training (IVET) curricula across eight European countries, drawing on harmonised national reports developed using a shared analytical framework.

Context

This paper forms part of a broader research project on the mapping of digital skills in initial vocational education and training (IVET) curricula using natural language processing (NLP) techniques across eight European countries at ISCED Level 3.
Drawing on comparative evidence, these preliminary findings show that although digital skills are a shared European policy priority, their curricular integration remains uneven in scope, depth, and consistency across countries. These differences are not random. Rather, they reflect structural features of IVET systems, including governance arrangements, curriculum update processes, stakeholder involvement, and implementation capacity. Understanding these structural factors is essential for policy-relevant conclusions.

Facts and findings

  • Governance arrangements are the main driver of curricular responsiveness: centralised systems ensure consistency but may update more slowly, while decentralised or partnership-based systems adapt faster but can lead to uneven outcomes across sectors and regions.
  • Three integration models are evident across the eight countries analysed: transversal digital skills for all learners, sector-specific embedding, and elective or pilot-based approaches; each with different implications for coverage, equity, and labour market relevance.
  • Systems with formal skills anticipation mechanisms and ongoing stakeholder involvement (employers, trade unions, sectoral bodies) integrate emerging digital skills more rapidly and systematically than those relying on periodic policy reform cycles.

Key messages

  • Digital skills are a shared EU policy priority, but their integration in IVET remains uneven in scope, depth, and consistency, reflecting structural features of national systems rather than differences in policy ambition.
  • No single governance model solves the trade-off between coherence and adaptability: the most effective approaches combine transversal digital skills requirements with sector-specific embedding, supported by responsive updating mechanisms and strong stakeholder coordination.
  • Without explicit equity-oriented measures, digitalisation risks increasing inequalities in IVET, as learners in lower-intensity sectors, rural regions, and small institutions may have fewer opportunities to acquire meaningful digital skills.
  • Teacher and trainer capacity is a cross-cutting constraint in all systems: curriculum reform without parallel investment in digital pedagogy and professional development risks remaining largely symbolic rather than impactful.

Policy pointers

  • Transversal digital skills could be embedded as a compulsory component across all IVET programmes to help ensure a common baseline for all learners, while still allowing space for sector-specific differentiation.
  • Flexible curriculum update mechanisms may support incremental, evidence-based revisions between major reform cycles, drawing on skills anticipation and labour market intelligence.
  • Stakeholder involvement in curriculum governance could be strengthened, alongside coordination mechanisms aimed at preventing advanced sectors from progressing in ways that widen digital disparities across the VET system.
  • Policy attention could be extended beyond curriculum design to implementation conditions: infrastructure, learning environments, and access to industry partnerships in disadvantaged regions and small providers may require targeted investment to support effective implementation.
  • Teacher and trainer professional development in digital competences and digital pedagogy is likely to be most effective when treated as a core rather than optional element of curriculum reform.
     

Ke stažení

Digital skills integration in IVET curricula

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