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EU
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Education, Training,
Youth |
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The opportunities which
the EU offers its citizens for living, studying and working in
other countries make a major contribution to cross-cultural
understanding, personal development and the realisation of the
EU’s full economic potential. Each year, well over one million
EU citizens of all ages benefit from EU-funded educational,
vocational and citizenship-building programmes. |
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The Union’s Education and
Training 2010 work programme sets the framework for national
policies and EU-funded programmes. This recognizes the central
role of education and training in the EU’s jobs and growth
agenda, and the vital social dimension of education and
training. Education and training improve our understanding of
the values of solidarity, equal opportunities and social
participation. There is also a positive relationship between
education and training and health, the environment, general
quality of life and levels of crime.
One of the largest EU-funded programmes is the Leonardo
da Vinci programme for vocational training and lifelong
learning, with on average more than €150 million to spend
annually. It promotes cross-border exchanges and projects
which foster innovation and entrepreneurship, improve the
quality of training and make it easier to obtain and use
vocational training and skills in other countries.
The EU also promotes vocational training through Cedefop, the
European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training, in
Thessaloniki. Cedefop provides scientific and technical
know-how in specific fields and promotes the exchange of ideas
between different European partners |
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The Erasmus programme for students and teachers
devotes on average some €135 million annually to grants for
students and teachers to spend time at more than 2 000
universities in 31 countries.
A separate Erasmus Mundus programme open to students
and academics from all over the world promotes Masters courses
involving consortia of least three European universities.
Leonardo da Vinci and Erasmus cover the EU, Iceland,
Liechtenstein, Norway, Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey.
Switzerland also participates, but on a more limited basis.
Other programmes include:
Grundtvig, for lifelong learning programmes.
Comenius, for co-operation between schools and their
teachers.
Lingua, which promotes linguistic diversity, better
language tuition and lifelong opportunities to learn
languages. Lingua complements activities under the
Commission's Language Action Plan and the EU goals of
maintaining linguistic diversity and giving everyone the
opportunity from an early age to acquire practical skills in
two foreign languages.
Funding for the application of new technologies
in education is available through the Minerva programme and
from a range of other sources which support the eLearning
stream of the eEurope Action Plan. eLearning encourages the
use of computers, multimedia tools and the internet. An
eTwinning programme for schools is an offshoot of this.
Lifelong learning to keep up with a knowledge-based
economy is an EU priority. Consequently, many of these
programmes are open to people of all ages. |
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Education, training and lifelong learning are vital to a
vibrant economy since they are the key to quality jobs and
active participation in society.
The EU has educational objectives for 2010 designed to
provide everyone with the basic essentials for a
knowledge-based society.
- at least 85% of 22-year olds
should have completed upper secondary education;
- no more than 10% of those aged
18-24 should have left school before completing upper
secondary education or vocational or other training;
- the total number of graduates in
mathematics, science and technology should have increased by
15% while the gender imbalance should decrease;
- the percentage of 15-year olds
with low achievement in reading literacy should have
decreased by at least 20% compared to 2000 levels;
- the average level of participation
in lifelong learning of those aged 25 to 64 should be at
least 12.5%.
- everyone who leaves school without
a job should be offered employment, apprenticeship,
additional training or alternative measures to promote their
employability within four months.
Single-format Europass documents valid throughout
the EU record different types of skills and qualifications
acquired in different EU countries. The Europass formats are
the Europass CV, the Europass Language Portfolio,
Europass Mobility and Europass Diploma Supplement
to record higher education and the Europass Certificate
Supplement to record vocational training. |
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Promoting convergence and comparable qualifications in
higher education, for example, through coordinated reforms,
compatible systems and common action serves these objectives.
The EU is working with 20 other countries through the ‘Bologna
process’ to create a European Higher Education Area by 2010.
A 'Copenhagen process' in which 32 countries participate
promotes cooperation in the reform and development of
vocational education and training systems. Work is under way
to implement a European educational credit transfer system and
to facilitate mutual recognition and the transferability of
vocational qualifications. This includes a plan for a European
Qualifications Framework for Lifelong Learning. |
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The EU promotes educational cooperation, exchanges and
courses in European integration with some 80 countries around
the world, from Mongolia to Mexico and from Algeria to
Australia.
The European Training Foundation in Turin, an EU agency,
promotes innovative practice in human resource development for
societies and economies in transition around the Mediterranean
and in eastern and south-eastern Europe and central Asia.
Policies for young people are not restricted to education.
EU heads of state and government in March 2005 adopted a
European Youth Pact. This establishes common principles on
creating job opportunities for young people, providing them
with a set of core skills while they are in education, and
establishing a balance between work and home life once they
take a job.
In addition, the EU’s Youth programme promotes active
involvement in the community and projects which give young
people a greater sense of EU citizenship, the EU provides some
€75m annually to support young people wanting to do
cross-border voluntary work, run projects to help local
communities or take part in study programmes not covered by
Socrates or Leonardo da Vinci. These exchanges are being
expanded to include more young people from both inside and
outside the EU, particularly from countries on the EU's
eastern and southern borders.
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