OECD Observer Q3-Q4 2019

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BLOGS

BlogServer on basic rights and duties, key features of political institutions and the voting process. This approach dovetails with the idea of representative democracy, where civic education aims to ensure that future voters are ready to evaluate public officials’ performance and fitness for duty. From OECD Education and Skills Today. More here: https://bit.ly/2YL6kzt

What regional data tells us about educational attainment and labour-market outcomes Simon Normandeau, Statistician, OECD Directorate for Education and Skills

100 things we’ve learned from PISA Marilyn Achiron, Editor, OECD Directorate for Education and Skills

We’ve compiled a list of 100 things we’ve learned from PISA over the past eight years. Scroll through the full list, test your knowledge on our new PISA quiz, ahead of the 3 December release of brand new PISA results! From OECD Education and Skills Today. More here: https://bit.ly/36ACrEN

Why it’s so hard to compare early childhood education and care across the world Eric Charbonnier, Analyst, OECD Directorate for Education and Skills

There is a growing consensus across the world about the importance of quality early childhood education and care (ECEC). Evidence shows that participating in high-quality ECEC can have a positive effect on children’s well-being, learning and development in the first years of their lives. But when we talk about ECEC at the international level, are we really talking about the same thing? The answer isn’t as obvious as it may seem–primarily because ECEC can take very different forms in different countries. From OECD Education and Skills Today. More here: https://bit.ly/2YGNzx6

Degrees or competencies? A new job language for the new economy Guillermo Elizondo, CEO & Founder, Territorium Life

Our economies are facing an immense challenge: high levels of unemployment and a shortage of job seekers with the needed skills. There is also a tremendous gap between the language companies and education providers use to describe skills. The critical question is how can education can really help people get the skills to find a job? Which style of learning can help people to become productive? From the OECD Forum Network. More here: https://bit.ly/34mQV9T

How education can help bolster civic engagement

Our analysis finds that most people without upper secondary education struggle to find employment, at both the national and regional level. There are only 10 regions where more than 80% of low-educated younger adults are employed. Tertiary educated young adults fare notably better in the job market. Employment rates for 25-34 year-olds with tertiary education are at least 80% in 237 regions, suggesting that attaining higher education is likely to reap benefits wherever you live. From OECD Education and Skills Today. More here: https://bit.ly/2PHOM31

It is never too late to invest in teachers’ professionalism Markus Schwabe, Statistician, OECD Directorate for Education and Skills

When it comes to the content and pedagogy of the subjects they teach, lower secondary teachers generally feel well prepared, according to results from our latest Teaching and Learning International Survey (TALIS). But less than half feel well prepared in areas of growing importance, such as using technology in teaching, teaching cross-curricular skills, or teaching in multicultural or multilingual environments. This could be attributed to teachers’ education and training in many countries, which traditionally focus on subject-based instruction, rather than new crosscurricular, problem-solving or project-based forms of teaching. From OECD Education and Skills Today. More here: https://bit.ly/2EezUUt

We need new education spending priorities to build the skills of the future Stefanie Schurer, Associate Professor, School of Economics, University of Sydney

The next 50 years will see an unprecedented increase in the degree of automation and worker replacement through the emergence of artificial intelligence. Under the assumption that we keep today’s model of training our workforce, ever larger numbers of individuals will be excluded from the labour market, relying on governmental social protection schemes. We need new sweeping changes to our spending priorities. OECD governments need to radically rethink their model of human capital investment and learn to identify the areas of investment with the highest returns. From the OECD Forum Network. More here: https://bit.ly/2qMp9ph

Marc Fuster Rabella, Analyst, OECD Directorate for Education and Skills

Civic education is part of the curriculum in all OECD countries. Civics at school usually focuses on building students’ knowledge

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These extracts from blogs appeared in Q3 2019 and are courtesy of the OECD Forum Network and OECD Education and Skills Today.


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New publications

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page 36

Your country has talent; Not all jobs are

3min
page 39

Focus on education

3min
page 37

Reviews: Treat the opioid epidemic as a public

3min
page 35

Andreas Schleicher Teachers’ pay: Mind the mid-career gap Anne-Lise Prigent

4min
pages 23-24

Profound change needed on climate

1min
page 32

Ambassadors Calendar; Frankie

2min
page 34

Linking Indigenous communities with regional

4min
pages 27-28

Microbial resistance: The battle continues Anne-Lise Prigent

4min
page 31

development Dawn Madahbee Leach, General Manager, Waubetek Business Development Corporation, and Vice-Chair of the National Indigenous Economic Development Board of Canada, Lars-Anders Baer, Chairperson of the Working Group for Indigenous Peoples to the Barents Euro-Arctic Co-operation, and Peter Yu, Chief Executive Officer of Nyamba Buru Yawuru Ltd and Chair of the Indigenous Reference Group to the Northern Ministerial Council. A guide f or tackling fraud and corruption in EU investment funds Lisa Kilduff

4min
pages 29-30

Building a collaborative culture for teachers

4min
page 22

Beyond humanitarian aid: Connecting the dots

4min
pages 25-26

Setting course for a human-centred AI Angel Gurría, Secretary-General of the OECD

4min
page 5

overcome an Achilles heel Benoît Bergeret, Founder, CEO, indust.ai; Founding Board Member, Hub France IA Blockchain is a major technology of the 21st century Bruno Le Maire, French Minister of the Economy and Finance

3min
page 21

AI society: How people can make artificial

7min
pages 17-18

small and medium-sized enterprises Lamia Kamal-Chaoui Why statistical offices should hire a comedian Vincent F . Hendricks, Professor, Director of the Center for Information and Bubble Studies, University of Copenhagen, Denmark and Johannes Jütting, Manager of the Partnership in Statistics for Development in the 21st Century (PARIS21), Paris, France

7min
pages 14-16

BlogServer

6min
pages 8-10

AI and Europe’s medium-sized firms: How to

6min
pages 19-20

Bees and the environment, Activism as lobbying, No fear of automation; Twitterings

3min
page 4

Skills mismatch warning; Fossil fuel support threatens climate action; New development standard to fight abuse; Working past 65; Soundbites; Economy; Country roundup; Other stories; Plus ça change

7min
pages 6-7
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