Challenges Addressed

6/14
  • Blended counselling
  • Exchange and knowledge transfer (among educational professionals, guidance counsellors, etc.)
  • Facilitation of transition from school education to career selection
  • Improve matching between skills and jobs
  • Improvement of guidance/ employment services
  • Increase the interaction between schools and professional life
  • Increase the mobility of people in Europe for education and employment purposes
  • Promote self-assessment
  • Provision of low-threshold information on educational guidance to disadvantaged adult populations
  • Raise awareness on guidance
  • Reduce early school leaving
  • Support those wishing to re-enter the labour market
  • Tackling unemployment
  • Target unemployment
Exchange and knowledge transfer (among educational professionals, guidance counsellors, etc.)
Facilitation of transition from school education to career selection
Improve matching between skills and jobs
Improvement of guidance/ employment services
Promote self-assessment
Raise awareness on guidance

Kyvyt is a personal learning environment and an ePortfolio service that allows gathering of all educational and professional info about in one place during one’s lifetime.

  • For students, Kyvyt acts as a place where they showcase their skills and know-how;
  • Teachers and study and career counsellors use the tool to monitor the progress of the students/users;
  • Kyvyt can also be applied in a workplace environment where supervisors can monitor and assess their employees’ and trainees’ skills and training process.

Policy objectives

7/15
  • Access to Lifelong Guidance Services
  • Assessing the effectiveness of Lifelong Guidance Provision
  • Assuring the quality of Lifelong Guidance Provision
  • Career Management Skills
  • Contributing the rise of mobility of people in Europe for education and employment purposes
  • Funding Lifelong Guidance Services
  • ICT in Lifelong Guidance
  • Improving careers information
  • Improving employability and supporting older workers
  • Interactive online tools
  • Raising the skills and qualifications of adults
  • Raising the skills and qualifications of young people
  • Strategic Leadership
  • Supporting people at risk and disadvantaged groups
  • Training and Qualifications of Guidance Practitioners
Access to Lifelong Guidance Services
Career Management Skills
ICT in Lifelong Guidance
Improving employability and supporting older workers
Raising the skills and qualifications of adults
Raising the skills and qualifications of young people
Training and Qualifications of Guidance Practitioners

INNOVATIVE ASPECTS OF LMI

4/21
  • Blended counselling
  • Creation of ePortfolios with students' skills and competences
  • Crowed sourcing of expert knowledge on educational guidance
  • Customisation of LMI through the users' adaptation according to their needs
  • Data entered by end-users
  • Effective job matching
  • Guidance methods
  • Informal LMI
  • Innovative user profiling
  • Interoperability with job-search engines
  • Life course related filtering of LMI
  • Matching of regional education to labour market
  • News relevant to educational guidance
  • Occupational information
  • One-stop-shop
  • Personalised educational advice
  • Provision of additional information on the awards not available elsewhere, to make it easily understood to employers and institutions in other countries
  • Provision of external links to available EC employment, guidance and educational services
  • Real time LMI
  • Scientific research on guidance
  • Thematic compilation of third party LMI
Creation of ePortfolios with students' skills and competences
Customisation of LMI through the users' adaptation according to their needs
Data entered by end-users
Innovative user profiling

Kyvyt’s LMI source is its end-users and more particular the ePortfolios and the documented skills and competences of students who use the tool. The LMI is the user’s property and it’s their decision whether they will share it with others or not.

Users can also integrate content that has been created elsewhere, e.g. YouTube, Google Drive, Microsoft OneDrive, SlideShare, Picasa, etc. This content is entered in Kyvyt by each respective user.

Finally, Kyvyt is not connected with any other online source of LMI, e.g. official platforms of the Employment and Economic Development Offices and of the Ministry of Education and Culture.

INNOVATIVE USE OF ICT

5/13
  • Combination with offline elements
  • Connection with third parties (LMI, PES, etc.)
  • Customized RSS feed
  • Dynamic interconnection of electronic resources according to a life course approach
  • e-portfolio
  • Interactive online tools
  • Mobile app
  • Online counselling
  • Online wiki
  • Open source
  • Personalised information storage
  • Quick diagnosis tool
  • Social media utilisation
e-portfolio
Interactive online tools
Open source
Personalised information storage
Social media utilisation

The Kyvyt ePortfolio service is based on the Mahara software, and it also includes features that are not open source since they are the product of Discendum.

ICT infrastructure requirements are limited to a web server and a database server.

Special focus has been given in ensuring data protection:

  • Several levels of security measures are implemented;
  • Physical access to servers is restricted and only authorized personnel is allowed;
  • Backup is applied on daily basis;
  • Users determine which content to share and with whom;
  • All servers hosting Kyvyt data are located in Finland.

Results and impacts obtained

Quantitative: Kyvyt is currently being applied to nearly 200 organisations and 60 000 end-users. Overall, around 57 000 end users have created their ePortfolios on Kyvyt.

As regards to qualitative results, the practice enables the acquisition of important CMS, empowers end-users to better showcase their skills and competences as well as employers to distinguish the job candidates that are fit for their skills needs and supports the duties and responsibilities of teaching staff and guidance practitioners.

Evaluation process: feedback could be received via the Kyvyt helpdesk.

Success Factors
  • Lifelong guidance provision;
  • Highly personalised to user and practitioners needs;
  • Users can integrate different types of media within their portfolios;
  • Provision of links with social media accounts;
  • Empowerment of teachers and guidance practitioners to offer better services to students;
  • Easiness of adopting the service and no setup cost or other kind of installation;
  • Higher customization of the ePortfolio to the Finnish context and to the needs of its specific target groups due to the open source software.
Points of Attention
  • The Mahara software does not support the use of multiple languages.
  • Numerous features require training by end-users.
  • Students are sceptical about making their content available to others.
  • Low interest by employers.
  • Difficulty of educational institutions to participate in a “generic” platform.

Transferability elements

Kyvyt is affected by the general guidelines for guidance that outline the Finnish LLG system: (i) the integration of guidance as a compulsory subject within the educational system, and (ii) the integration of ICT as a compulsory element of career education within the national curricula.

The commercial roll out of Kyvyt is targeted at an institutional level, with organisations paying an annual fee for the basic service that ranges from EUR 300 – 2 500, depending on the size and type of the organisation (i.e. colleges, universities, corporations and organisations).

Kyvyt is currently being operated and maintained by a team of six to seven people, with following roles: Product Manager; Trainers; IT staff and Helpdesk.

All the above staff is working on a part-time basis. The Trainers have University degrees related to education and experience that revolves around teaching and counselling.

  • Users need to have an adequate ICT literacy level;
  • Training is provided at teachers, counsellors, technical support personnel and other users and is adapted to the needs of each client.

The tool is largely based on informal LMI offered by its end-users voluntarily.