Building skills beyond a
degree
Aligning diverse skilling
mechanisms with the unified NSQF has started creating a skilling ecosystem. If
implemented properly, it can be transformative for India
India has
had multiple mechanisms for vocational education and training, driven by over
20 central ministries and various regulators such as AICTE, UGC, NCVT, SCVTs,
and school and technical education boards. In the non-formal private sector,
training providers such as NIIT, aircrew training academies, IL&FS, etc, in
different sectors and of varying sizes, quality and shapes are also active. In
addition, many employers such as Infosys and Maruti have set up in-house
dedicated infrastructure for skilling fresh graduates to meet their own
requirements.
The country
also has millions of people who have learnt vocational skills through the
guru-chela tradition in an informal manner. This is further complicated by the
fact that most vocational training and education systems continue to remain
either unconnected with or loosely linked to industries’ requirements. There
are no common yardsticks for measuring work-related competencies across various
mechanisms of learning skills.
An obvious
answer to these is to create common standards incorporating the industries’
requirements for different kinds of job roles, and mechanisms for evaluating
and aligning the vocational training being provided by the above mentioned
training providers with these standards.
The National
Skills Qualifications Framework (NSQF), notified by the then government in
December 2013, aims to address these issues. It is designed to enable the
learner to acquire knowledge and skills which are required by the National
Occupational Standards (NOS) to be able to perform a particular job role. It
organises them as a series of qualifications across 10 levels—from level 1 to
10. Each level is defined by a set of level descriptors that describe in a
subject/sector neutral way—what the holder of a qualification at a level should
know and should be able to do. Each job role is pegged at a specific NSQF level
based on the best fitment with level descriptors.
The National
Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) has anchored the creation of 31 Sector
Skill Councils (SSCs). Each SSC is primarily governed by a set of employers in
the respective sectors. NOSs are developed by the respective sector SSCs with
wide-ranging consultation with different stakeholders.
NSQF-based
vocational qualification gives the learner a proof that he or she is adequately
trained for a particular job role once the programme is completed, evaluation
cleared successfully and certificate from SSC obtained. This certificate
guarantees that the held qualification complies with NOS for a particular job
role in a specific sector. This, in fact, addresses the issue of common
national standards and alignment of competency-based learning outcomes with the
knowledge and skills required by employers for a specific job role.
Qualification packs or NOSs for about 1,000 job roles across different job
sectors have already been developed by different SSCs.
NSQF-based
qualifications are being embedded in the formal education system at high school
and higher education level, since 2012. Over 2,000 government schools across 10
states have already started offering NSQF-based vocational subjects from
classes 9 to 12, as one of the subjects. The University Grants Commission (UGC)
had started the Community College Scheme in 2013, which offers vocational
diploma of one year and an advanced diploma of two years, aligned to NSQF.
Further, the Bachelor of Vocation degree was started by UGC in 2014. The All
India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) has also introduced the Community
College Scheme. Certificate programmes offered by about 12,000 ITIs will also
be aligned with NSQF over the next 12 months. Several vocational education and
training programmes offered under the schemes of central ministries such as
rural development, urban development, labour ministry, tourism, tribal
development, food processing, etc, are being aligned to NSQF.
Similarly,
various state governments and their skill development missions have started
aligning their offerings with NSQF. Over 170 training partners of NSDC across
the country have been mandated to align their programmes, evaluation and
certification with NSQF. NSQF also provides for recognition of prior learning,
whereby skills and knowledge gained by individuals outside formal learning
processes are assessed and granted recognition.
Recognition
of prior learning, in fact, has the potential to enable millions of
experientially skilled to be able to derive appropriate economic and social
benefits of their skills.
NSQF would
enable creating pathways for vertical and horizontal mobility of learners
within the vocational domain and also across vocational and general education.
The government and NSDC have been working towards establishing equivalences of
NSQF-based qualifications with international qualifications, which could lead
to skilled Indians taking up employment in those countries without or minimal
additional training or certification.
NSQF
mandates that, by December 2016, only NSQF-compliant courses would be eligible
for government funding.
The minister
for skills development and entrepreneurship, Rajiv Pratap Rudy, has announced
that the recruitment rules for the central government and PSUs will be amended
by December 2016 to define eligibility criteria for all positions, as mandated
in NSQF. State governments and their PSUs shall also be encouraged to amend
their recruitment rules.
Aligning
diverse skilling mechanisms with the unified NSQF has started creating a
skilling ecosystem, which, if implemented meticulously, can be transformative
for India. NSQF is turning into an anchoring point for the national priority of
skill development for reaping the economic and social dividends of our youthful
nation, by providing the skills which our youth, India and the world needs.
The author
is vice-president, Wadhwani Foundation. He led the Foundation’s implementation
of vocational education in schools in partnership with state governments and
the design of Community College Scheme with the HRD ministry.
Source
| Financial Express | 1 June 2015
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Khaitan &
Co
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