- 2018Design
- 2019Design
- 2020Completed
Background
During the Slovak Presidency in the Council of the EU in 2016, an agreement was reached between the Minister of Education and the Director of Cedefop on cooperation in the area of skills governance, where Slovakia was lagging behind other countries.
Objectives
Cedefop's tasks were as follows:
- to organise consultations with stakeholders, including national and regional authorities, relevant public agencies, research organisations, employer representatives and trade union representatives;
- to prepare a comprehensive overview of what policy-makers and practitioners in Slovakia think about the current situation;
- to offer inputs to the discussion concerning ensuring effective links between the education and training system and the needs of the labour market, and suggest changes based on international expertise.
Description
Slovakia participates in Cedefop's country reviews on Governance of EU skills anticipation and matching systems. The aim of the project is to improve the management and coordination of skills anticipation efforts, making existing skills anticipation initiatives more useful for policy, and better linking skills intelligence to education and training. Within this cooperation, an initial country report was commissioned and offered for comment to the education ministry in February 2018; it was followed by interviews with stakeholders and those responsible for skills data collections.
First contacts between Cedefop experts and Slovak stakeholders were initiated. The national steering committee has been established.
After the meeting with policy-makers held on 4 April 2019, Cedefop worked on synthesising the information and identifying main areas of possible policy intervention and action that could be taken forward in the future. In December 2019, the draft final report Strengthening skills anticipation and matching in Slovakia: turning data into skills intelligence to support policy-makers and learners, was submitted for comment to the members of the National Steering Committee.
In the first quarter of 2020, Cedefop consulted on the draft report with the National Steering Committee. The final report, Strengthening skills anticipation and matching in Slovakia, was published in September 2020. Three possible areas of intervention were identified: institutional foundations, skills governance processes, and sustainability of skills governance arrangements. Recommendations concerning these three areas were suggested.
Bodies responsible
- Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sport (until 2024)
Target groups
Education professionals
- School leaders
- Guidance practitioners
Entities providing VET
- Companies
- Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)
- VET providers (all kinds)
Other stakeholders
- Social partners (employer organisations and trade unions)
Thematic categories
Governance of VET and lifelong learning
This thematic category looks at existing legal frameworks providing for strategic, operational – including quality assurance – and financing arrangements for VET and lifelong learning (LLL). It examines how VET and LLL-related policies are placed in broad national socioeconomic contexts and coordinate with other strategies and policies, such as economic, social and employment, growth and innovation, recovery and resilience.
This thematic category covers partnerships and collaboration networks of VET stakeholders – especially the social partners – to shape and implement VET in a country, including looking at how their roles and responsibilities for VET at national, regional and local levels are shared and distributed, ensuring an appropriate degree of autonomy for VET providers to adapt their offer.
The thematic category also includes efforts to create national, regional and sectoral skills intelligence systems (skills anticipation and graduate tracking) and using skills intelligence for making decisions about VET and LLL on quality, inclusiveness and flexibility.
This thematic sub-category refers to the integration of VET into economic, industrial, innovation, social and employment strategies, including those linked to recovery, green and digital transitions, and where VET is seen as a driver for innovation and growth. It includes national, regional, sectoral strategic documents or initiatives that make VET an integral part of broader policies, or applying a mix of policies to address an issue VET is part of, e.g. in addressing youth unemployment measures through VET, social and active labour market policies that are implemented in combination. National skill strategies aiming at quality and inclusive lifelong learning also fall into this sub-category.
This thematic sub-category refers to the ways VET is funded at the system level. Policies include optimisation of VET provider funding that allows them to adapt their offer to changing skill needs, green and digital transitions, the social agenda and economic cycles, e.g. increasing the funding for VET or for specific programmes. They can also concern changing the mechanism of how the funding is allocated to VET schools (per capita vs based on achievement or other criteria). Using EU funds and financial instruments for development of VET and skills also falls into this sub-category.
This thematic sub-category refers both to formal mechanisms of stakeholder engagement in VET governance and to informal cooperation among stakeholders, which motivate shared responsibility for quality VET. Formal engagement is usually based on legally established institutional procedures that clearly define the role and responsibilities for relevant stakeholders in designing, implementing and improving VET. It also refers to establishing and increasing the degree of autonomy of VET providers for agile and flexible VET provision.
In terms of informal cooperation, the sub-category covers targeted actions by different stakeholders to promote or implement VET. This cooperation often leads to creating sustainable partnerships and making commitments for targeted actions, in line with the national context and regulation, e.g. national alliances for apprenticeships, pacts for youth or partnerships between schools and employers. It can also include initiatives and projects run by the social partners or sectoral organisations or networks of voluntary experts and executives, retired or on sabbatical, to support their peers in the fields of VET and apprenticeships, as part of the EAfA.
High-quality and timely skills intelligence is a powerful policy tool, helping improve economic competitiveness and fostering social progress and equality through the provision of targeted skills training to all citizens (Cedefop, 2020). Skills intelligence is the outcome of an expert-driven process of identifying, analysing, synthesising and presenting quantitative and/or qualitative skills and labour market information. Skills intelligence draws on data from multiple sources, such as graduate tracking systems, skills anticipation mechanisms, including at sectoral and regional levels. Actions related to establishing and developing such systems fall under this thematic sub-category.
Subsystem
Further reading
Country
Type of development
Cedefop, & ReferNet. (2025). Cedefop country review on skills anticipation and matching: Slovakia. In Cedefop, & ReferNet. (2025). Timeline of VET policies in Europe (2024 update) [Online tool].
https://www.cedefop.europa.eu/hu/tools/timeline-vet-policies-europe/search/28757