Timeline
  • 2015Approved/Agreed
  • 2016Implementation
  • 2017Implementation
  • 2018Implementation
  • 2019Approved/Agreed
  • 2020Implementation
  • 2021Implementation
  • 2022Implementation
  • 2023Implementation
  • 2024Implementation
ID number
28289

Background

A brief overview of the context and rationale of the policy development, explaining why it is implemented or why it is important.

A quality education system could not exist without well-prepared teachers. It is crucial in professional training that both theory instructors and in-company trainers must have up-to-date knowledge. They should be able to follow the technological developments of a given sector. Only a few vocational education and training (VET) teachers participate in in-company further training, which is why their knowledge cannot adequately keep up with the technological developments of Industry 4.0.

The number of teachers leaving their profession is high, due to the higher wages offered by other economic sectors. With a retirement wave expected, focused human development planning is necessary. It is a challenge to find and to keep both VET teachers and the practical trainers.

Objectives

Goals and objectives of the policy development.

One of the most important tasks is to have theory and practical teachers in VET who are well aware of the most up-to-date technologies of a given sector i.e. who adapt the challenges of Industry 4.0 for teaching in IVET. The only way to fulfil this need is if further training of professional teachers is organised within the corporate environment. They also need to be prepared to use new teaching methods that are appropriate for preparing students for their final examinations and the labour market. A competitive career structure and an appropriate human resources development programme are required order to ensure a teaching staff possessing marketable knowledge.

Description

What/How/Who/For whom/When of the policy development in detail, explaining its activities and annual progress, main actors and target groups.

The Ministry responsible for VET outlined its priorities in the decree, VET in the service of the economy, which was approved by the Government in February 2015. The decree calls for a career scheme for school-based vocational trainers and a motivational system that allows the differentiation of remuneration and recognition of extra work. To expand career opportunities and raise the standards of professional work, alternative pathways are also being recommended for teachers to progress in the teaching profession, for example through introducing a post-graduate examination for VET school leaders. The decree VET in the service of the economy also calls for in-service training to focus on teaching methods such as project and teamwork.

2015
Approved/Agreed
2016
Implementation
2017
Implementation
2018
Implementation
2019
Approved/Agreed

To have the best prepared teaching staff in VET (referred to as instructors from 1 July 2020) conveying the most up-to-date knowledge, from the academic year 2020/21 they will need to participate every four years in compulsory further training; this is at least 60 hours in length, primarily in a company environment or in a training centre. Non-fulfilment of this obligation may result in the termination of their employment. Instructors are exempt from the further training obligation if they are within less than five years of qualifying for their old age pension. The fulfilment of the further training obligation has to be recorded in the NEPTUN-KRÉTA system.

2020
Implementation

In 2020, the sector skills councils (SSCs) elaborated sector-based proposals for the further training of VET teachers in a corporate environment to renew and to improve their knowledge, skills and competences in a demand-driven structure.

The core target is to prepare VET teachers for actual labour market needs, because it is essential for them to stay in their profession in the long run. They have to keep up with the sectoral technical and technological expectations in the given sector.

Teacher training courses can take place in knowledge centres (a non-profit business organisation where a higher education institution and a VET centre have at least 51 % share of ownership), in sectoral training centres (a non-profit business association that aims to accomplish cooperation to meet dual training requirements) or at a dual partner within a corporate environment.

The evaluation system for VET teachers was worked out and was applied during the differentiation of their salary increase. The criteria for the new assessment of VET teachers were created, based on the EQAVET system. The assessment of VET teachers and their differentiated and objective evaluation was made by the directors of the VET institutions.

2021
Implementation

Since 1 July 2021, further training of VET teachers and directors is under the supervision of the minister responsible for VET and is organised through the IKK Innovative Training Support Centre Plc. (IKK). At national strategic level, IKK performs the planning, coordination, organisation and continuous review of further training for VET teachers. More specifically, IKK has created and operates a unified Teacher further training system (Oktatói Továbbképzési Rendszer, OTR). The system contributes to the renewal of vocational training, supports the development of VET teacher digital competence and promotes improvement in quality in professional education. Following the successful completion of further training, the CPD providers issue a certificate for participants, which indicates training credits. In order to establish the exact credit value, the IKK binds the credit value to the number of hours spent in the given training, which is 1 credit/hour. In 2021, 44 further training programmes are available on the IKK website.

2022
Implementation

Continuing professional development (CPD) of VET teachers and trainers (OTR):

The range of training courses available is constantly expanding, with more than 160 courses available by February 2023 in the areas of digital competences, language competences, vocational training, in-company training and methodological training.

VET institutions can contact the IKK Training Support Centre with their requests for the training courses published by IKK on its website. Here, instructors and heads of schools can find information about further training activities, their purpose, topics, number of hours, as well as the methods and options for completing the assessment required to obtain credits.

Salary increase for VET teachers:

In VET, a differentiated increase in salary of VET teachers is also planned in line with the salary increase steps in public education from 2023, linked to the performance evaluation of the three-year rating system to be introduced in the 2022/23 school year in industry.

Performance evaluation of VET teachers - quality assurance:

As part of the comprehensive transformation of VET, in accordance with the objectives of the VET 4.0 Strategy, a new, unified quality management system (MIR) was introduced in vocational education, based on the European vocational training quality assurance reference framework (EQAVET).

Under the MIR, VET teachers and heads of VET schools are assessed every three years. The evaluation of VET teachers is carried out by the director on the basis of a methodological proposal issued by the minister responsible for VET, as defined in the quality management system of the VET institution. The maintainer of the VET institution must be involved in the evaluation of the institutional managers, the director is evaluated by the maintainer.

The July 2020 salary increase for VET teachers was also based on performance evaluation, so the countdown started then. Accordingly, the next performance evaluation of the VET teachers and the institutional directors is planned for May-June 2023.

2023
Implementation

Continuing professional development (CPD) of VET teachers and trainers (Oktatói Továbbképzési Rendszer, OTR):

a. More than 220 CPD programmes are available on the OTR platform, which is regularly updated and expanded to reflect labour market needs and employment policy priorities.

b. An amendment to Government Decree 12/2020 (II.7.) on the implementation of the VET Act, which entered into force on 7 July 2023, states that VET teachers who obtain a higher vocational qualification or a specialised qualification within higher education will be considered to have fulfilled their CPD obligation for one cycle.

c. CPD activities completed under the Erasmus+ programme, including vocational, linguistic, methodological training and digital competence development, as well as teaching practice, job shadowing, and school or dual-training placement visits, may also be recognised.

Salary increase for VET teachers:

To maintain the competitiveness of VET salaries, wages were increased in two stages in 2023, following similar measures in the public general education sector. The total average annual wage increase was 15%.

Performance evaluation of VET teachers:

a. By 31 August 2022, VET schools developed their own quality management systems based on the self-evaluation manual.

b. In 2023, the first VET teacher performance evaluations were carried out in line with methodological recommendations

2024
Implementation

From 1 January 2024, the salaries of VET teachers were further increased, with an average pay rise of 32.2%. Following this increase, the minimum monthly salary for teachers reached HUF 581 680 (EUR 1420).

The 2024 salary increase is based on the performance evaluations conducted in May-June 2023. The aim of the Government is to further strengthen the VET system, and one of the most important conditions for this is a greater appreciation of teachers.

Bodies responsible

This section lists main bodies that are responsible for the implementation of the policy development or for its specific parts or activities, as indicated in the regulatory acts. The responsibilities are usually explained in its description.
  • Ministry of Culture and Innovation
  • IKK Innovative Training Support Center (IKK Nonprofit Plc.)

Target groups

Those who are positively and directly affected by the measures of the policy development; those on the list are specifically defined in the EU VET policy documents. A policy development can be addressed to one or several target groups.

Education professionals

  • Teachers
  • Trainers
  • School leaders
  • Adult educators

Thematic categories

Thematic categories capture main aspects of the decision-making and operation of national VET and LLL systems. These broad areas represent key elements that all VET and LLL systems have to different extents and in different combinations, and which come into focus depending on the EU and national priorities. Thematic categories are further divided into thematic sub-categories. Based on their description, policy developments can be assigned to one or several 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.

Further developing national quality assurance systems

This thematic sub-category refers to further development of national quality assurance (QA) systems for IVET and CVET, for all learning environments (school-based provision and work-based learning, including apprenticeships) and all learning types (digital, face-to-face or blended), delivered by both public and private providers. These systems are underpinned by the EQAVET quality criteria and by indicative descriptors applied both at system and provider levels, as defined in Annex II of the VET Recommendation. The sub-category concerns creating and improving external and self-evaluation of VET providers, and establishing criteria of QA, accreditation of providers and programmes. It also covers the activities of Quality assurance national reference points for VET on implementing and further developing the EQAVET framework, including the implementation of peer reviews at VET system level.

Teachers, trainers and school leaders competences

Competent and motivated VET teachers in schools and trainers in companies are crucial to VET becoming innovative and relevant, agile, resilient, flexible, inclusive and lifelong.

This thematic category comprises policies and practices of initial training and continuing professional development approaches in a systemic and systematic manner. It also looks at measures aiming to update (entry) requirements and make teaching and training careers attractive and bring more young and talented individuals and business professionals into teaching and training. Supporting VET educators by equipping them with adequate competences, skills and tools for the green transition and digital teaching and learning are addressed in separate thematic sub-categories.

The measures in this category target teachers and school leaders, company trainers and mentors, adult educators and guidance practitioners.

Systematic approaches to and opportunities for initial and continuous professional development of school leaders, teachers and trainers

This thematic sub-category refers to all kinds of initial and continuing professional development (CPD) for VET educators who work in vocational schools and in companies providing VET. VET educators include teachers and school leaders, trainers and company managers involved in VET, as well as adult educators and guidance practitioners – those who work in school- and work-based settings. The thematic sub-category includes national strategies, training programmes or individual courses to address the learning needs of VET educators and to develop their vocational (technical) skills, and pedagogical (teaching) skills and competences. Such programmes concern state-of-the-art vocational pedagogy, innovative teaching methods, and competences needed to address evolving teaching environments, e.g. teaching in multicultural settings, working with learners at risk of early leaving, etc.

Attractiveness of the teaching and training profession/career

This thematic sub-category refers to measures aimed at engaging more professionals into teaching and training careers, including career schemes or incentives. It includes measures enabling teaching and training of staff, managing VET provider and trainer teams in companies to act as multipliers and mediators, and supporting their peers and/or local communities.

European priorities in VET

EU priorities in VET and LLL are set in the Council Recommendation for VET for sustainable competitiveness, social fairness and resilience, adopted on 24 November 2020 and in the Osnabrück Declaration on VET endorsed on 30 November 2020.

VET Recommendation

  • VET as an attractive choice based on modern and digitalised provision of training and skills
  • VET underpinned by a culture of quality assurance

Subsystem

Part of the vocational education and training and lifelong learning systems the policy development applies to.
IVET
CVET

Country

Type of development

Policy developments are divided into three types: strategy/action plan; regulation/legislation; and practical measure/initiative.
Regulation/Legislation
Cite as

Cedefop, & ReferNet. (2025). VET teacher initial and continuing training requirements and career opportunities: Hungary. In Cedefop, & ReferNet. (2025). Timeline of VET policies in Europe (2024 update) [Online tool].

https://www.cedefop.europa.eu/en/tools/timeline-vet-policies-europe/search/28289