Abstract
There exists a significant gap between the requirements specified within higher education qualifications and the requirements sought by employers. The former, commonly expressed in terms of learning outcomes, provide a measure of capability, of what skills have been learnt (an input measure); the latter, commonly expressed in terms of role descriptions, provide a measure of competency, of what a learner has become skillful in (an output measure). Accreditation traditionally provides a way of translating and embedding industry-relevant content into education programmes but current approaches make fully addressing this requirements gap, referred to here as the Capability-Competency Chasm, very difficult. This paper explores current efforts to address this global challenge, primarily through STEM examples that apply within the United Kingdom and European Union, before proposing a way of bridging this chasm through the use of a 21st Century (C21) skills taxonomy. The concept of C21 Skills Hours as a new input measurement for learning within qualifications is introduced, and an illustrative example is presented to show the C21 skills taxonomy in action. The paper concludes with a discussion of how such a taxonomy can also be used to support a microcredentialing framework that aligns to existing competency frameworks, enabling formal, non-formal and informal learning to all be recognized. A C21 Skills taxonomy can therefore be used to bridge the gap between capability (input) and competency (output), providing a common language both for learning and demonstrating a skill. This approach has profound implications for addressing current and future skills gaps as well as for supporting a transition to more personalised learning within schools, colleges and universities and more lifelong learning both during and outside of employment.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Proceedings of the 2021 IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON) |
Subtitle of host publication | Women in Engineering |
Editors | Thomas Klinger, Christian Kollmitzer, Andreas Pester |
Place of Publication | Piscataway |
Publisher | IEEE |
Pages | 344-354 |
Number of pages | 10 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781728184784 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 21 Apr 2021 |
Event | EDUCON2021 – IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference: "Women in Engineering" - Online - Carinthia University of Applied Sciences and the University of Applied Sciences Technikum , Vienna, Austria Duration: 21 Apr 2021 → 23 Apr 2021 Conference number: 12 http://www.educon-conference.org/current/ |
Publication series
Name | IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON) |
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Publisher | IEEE |
ISSN (Print) | 2165-9567 |
Conference
Conference | EDUCON2021 – IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference |
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Abbreviated title | EDUCON 2021 |
Country/Territory | Austria |
City | Vienna |
Period | 21/04/21 → 23/04/21 |
Internet address |
Keywords
- Personalised Learning
- Skills Taxonomy
- Micro-credential
- Framework
- Accreditation