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Page 1: SOLAS Corporate Plan 2014-2016 · RPL Recognition of Prior Learning SAP Systems Applications and Products (in data processing ) ... 3.1.3 Integrated planning 30 3.1.4 Data infrastructure

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SOLAS Corporate Plan

2014-2016

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Published

By

SOLAS,

Strategy Unit,

27-33 Upper Baggot Street,

Dublin 4,

Ireland.

Ph.: 01-6070500

www.solas.ie

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List of Acronyms

AEGI Adult Education Guidance Initiative

AONTAS The National Adult Learning Organisation

BTEI Back to Education Initiative

CAO Central Applications Office

CPD Continuous Professional Development

CSCS Construction Skills Certification Scheme

DSP Department of Social Protection

DES Department of Education and Skills

DPER Department of Public Expenditure and Reform

EGF European Globalisation Fund

EGFSN Expert Group on Future Skills Needs

EI Enterprise Ireland

ESF European Social Fund

ESRI Economic and Social Research Institute

ETB Education and Training Board

ETBI Education and Training Boards Ireland

EU European Union

FÁS Training and Employment Authority

FET Further Education and Training

FETAC Further Education and Training Awards Council

FESS Further Education Support Service

FIT Fastrack to IT

GDP Gross Domestic Product

HEA Higher Education Authority

HEI Higher Education Institute

HET Higher Education and Training

HETAC Higher Education and Training Awards Council

IBEC Irish Business and Employers’ Confederation

ICT Information and Communications Technology

IDA Industrial Development Agency

INOU Irish National Organisation of the Unemployed

IoT Institute of Technology

ISME Irish Small and Medium Enterprises Association

IUQB Irish University Quality Board

IVEA Irish Vocational Education Association

LTU Long-term Unemployed Person

NALA National Adult Literacy Agency

NCGE National Centre for Guidance in Education

NESC National Economic and Social Council

NFQ National Framework of Qualifications

NSS National Skills Strategy

NQAI National Qualifications Authority of Ireland

STEM Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths

OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

PIAAC Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies

PLC Post Leaving Certificate Course

PLSS Programme and Learner Support System

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PMDS Performance Management and Development System

QA Quality Assurance

QSCS Quarrying Skills Certification Scheme

QQI Quality and Qualifications Ireland

RPL Recognition of Prior Learning

SAP Systems Applications and Products (in data processing )

SIG SOLAS Implementation Plan

SME Small Medium-sized Enterprises

SOLAS An tSeirbhís Oideachais Leanúnaigh Agus Scileanna

SST Specific Skills Training

VEC Vocational Education Committee

VET Vocational Education and Training

VTOS Vocational Training Opportunities Scheme

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Table of Contents

Part Section Description Page

List of Acronyms 3

Foreword 7

Executive Summary 10

1 Background: FET Reform, the Economy and Labour Market, Corporate

Plan Development

15

1.1 Introduction 15

1.2 FET Reform and the Establishment of SOLAS 15

1.1.2 The policy context for FET reform 15

1.2.2 Implementing the FET reform agenda 16

1.3 The Economic and Labour Market Context for SOLAS Action 17

1.4 The Strategic Framework for the SOLAS Corporate Plan 20

1.5 The Programme and Funding Context 20

1.5.1 Funding for FET: A diverse landscape 20

1.5.2 SOLAS funding 21

1.6 Developing the SOLAS Corporate Plan 21

2 Overview of the Corporate Plan 24

2.1 Introduction 24

2.2 SOLAS Vision 24

2.3 SOLAS Mission 24

2.4 SOLAS Core Principles 24

2.5 The SOLAS High-Level Goals 25

2.6 Connecting the Main Elements of the SOLAS Corporate Plan 26

3 The SOLAS Work Programme and Measures of Success 28

3.1 Enabling Delivery of Skills for the Economy 28

3.1.1 Agreed FET outcomes 28

3.1.2 New funding model 29

3.1.3 Integrated planning 30

3.1.4 Data infrastructure 31

3.2 Supporting Active Inclusion 31

3.2.1 Targeting provision for priority groups 31

3.2.2 Barriers to participation in FET 32

3.2.3 Literacy and numeracy provision 32

3.2.4 Embedding basic skills 32

3.2.5 Accreditation 33

3.3 Empowering learners and employers 33

3.3.1 Making informed choices 33

3.3.2 Flexible and high-quality FET 33

3.3.3 Supporting progression 35

3.3.4 The learner and employer voice 36

3.4 Influencing FET Policy and practice by Generating Intelligence and

Supporting Innovation

36

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Part Section Description Page

3.4.1 Research 36

3.4.2 Stimulating innovation and entrepreneurship 36

3.4.3 Evaluation 38

3.4.4 Evaluation/Promoting the benefits of FET 38

3.5 Building Sector Capacity and Responsiveness 39

3.5.1 Integrating former FÁS training into further education 39

3.5.2 Continuing Professional Development (CPD) 39

3.5.3 Sector advocacy 39

3.6 Building SOLAS capability and organisational effectiveness 40

3.6.1 An effective SOLAS structure. 40

3.6.2 Improving SOLAS capability 41

3.6.3 Communications and branding strategy 41

3.7 What will success look like for SOLAS? 43

3.7.1 Measuring Success 43

4 Overarching Implementation Plan 45

4.1 Implementation 45

4.1.1 Context and purpose 45

4.1.2 Implementation timelines 45

4.1.3 Implementation challenges 45

4.1.4 Implementation oversight 46

4.1.5 Implementation monitoring 46

4.1.6 Targets 46

4.1.7 Implementation Costs 46

4.2 Overarching Implementation Plan 48

Figures

1 Overview of the Corporate Plan 26

2 The relationship between the six high-level Goals 28

Tables

1 Supporting economic recovery: opportunities for FET 18

2 List of strategic objectives to achieve the SOLAS Goals 27

3 Possible measures and indicators for each of the high-level SOLAS Goals 43

4 Key actions where additional funding may be required 47

Appendices

1 Government Reforms 61

2 Employment Projections 2012-2020 64

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Foreword

The Challenge

The country is emerging from the deepest economic crisis in its history. The economy and the labour

market are now recovering. The Government’s ambition, as set out in its Medium-Term Economic

Strategy,1 is for Ireland to survive and thrive in an increasingly globalised international economy.

The further education and training (FET) sector is an important pillar of this economic strategy. It will

play its part by ensuring that individuals are equipped with the skills to compete for work and can

benefit from the improving economic conditions.

For its part, SOLAS has been tasked with building the identity and values of a world-class, integrated

FET system.2 People must have confidence that the FET system can deliver the right opportunities

for them. SOLAS, together with the new network of Education and Training Boards delivering quality

further education and training programmes, will generate that confidence.

This is a huge challenge. Meeting it will require SOLAS and the FET sector as a whole to be ambitious

and rise to the challenge of transforming the sector in Ireland.

The SOLAS ambition is to be:

• The leading voice for further education and training in Ireland

• The leading hub of labour market intelligence in Ireland

• Known for best practice in corporate governance and excellence in everything it does

• Demonstrably having a positive impact on individuals, communities and businesses

• Outward facing and client-centred

• Being vigorous, flexible and responsive.

What will SOLAS do?

The functions of SOLAS will be: to manage, co-ordinate and support the delivery of integrated

further education and training by the Education and Training Boards (ETBs); to monitor delivery and

provide funding based on reliable, good quality data and positive outcomes; and, to promote further

education and training provision that is relevant to individual learner needs and national skills needs.

This includes the needs of business and future skills needs.3

SOLAS funding will clearly demonstrate a commitment to creating a FET sector that will secure the

right skills for learners and employers to succeed, at a cost that delivers value for money for the

taxpayer. Employers play a key role in identifying the FET skills needed for business to thrive. SOLAS

will collaborate more-intensely with employers at national level, building on existing links such as

the EGFSN. It will also support ETBs at local level to get closer to employers and build capacity to

1 Government of Ireland, (2013), A STRATEGY FOR GROWTH: Medium Term Economic Strategy 2014 – 2020.

2Department of Education and Skills (2012), An Action Plan for SOLAS (An Seirbhísí Oideachais Leanúnaigh Agus Scileanna) The new Further Education and Training (FET) Authority

3 Ibid.

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innovate and respond more rapidly to local employer needs and the changing contours of the labour

market.

Leading Change in FET

As recognised in the Further Education and Training Strategy, a combined effort is required from

many state institutions in order to improve the FET role in equipping people with the entry level and

intermediate skills that enterprises require and which will help them compete for employment. The

FET Strategy is inclusive and recognises that all citizens have a potential to develop their skill sets if

afforded the opportunity and support to do so.

This Corporate Plan sets out what SOLAS will do over the next three years to lead change in the FET

sector from the perspective of ensuring relevant, high-quality, FET programmes which are delivered

to a very high standard.

In order to lead this change, SOLAS will be a trusted guardian of FET, will develop its knowledge base

and will use this to advance the FET contribution to citizens, the economy and society. Funding will

be applied judiciously, firmly and equitably in pursuit of the agreed objectives for the FET sector.

Over the lifetime of the Corporate Plan, SOLAS expects significant strides to be made in the following

areas:

• FET relevance, quality and delivery

• The availability of FET provision that is aimed at the entry and intermediate level skills required

by employees to meet current and future needs of employers

• Better experiences and outcomes for learners linked to their level of readiness to compete for

jobs in an open labour market

• The contribution of FET to economic and social development.

The approach to how these will be achieved is set out in an Overarching Implementation in Part 4 of

this document and will be further amplified in a detailed Operating Plan to be developed when

SOLAS is fully structured and which will include appropriate benchmarks, milestones and targets.

How will SOLAS do this?

We have described above what SOLAS will do, how it will make a difference, and what it will ensure

will take place. The following six high-level Goals set out, in a broad sense, how all of this will happen

over the next three years.

The first two goals ensure that FET resources are targeted to where the need is greatest and that the

new FET planning and funding model, as well as the new data infrastructure facilitates and supports

this:

Goal 1: Enabling delivery of skills for the economy

Goal 2: Supporting active inclusion

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Goals 3 and 4 focus on ensuring that there is a new relationship with employers and that FET

provision is more responsive to the needs of learners and employers, as well as to inculcate a spirit

of innovation, entrepreneurship and self-employment:

Goal 3: Empowering learners and employers

Goal 4: Influencing FET policy and practice through generating intelligence and supporting

innovation and entrepreneurship

Goals 5 and 6 focus on ensuring that the FET sector has the capacity to be responsive and that it

targets its resources at what works best; and, that SOLAS becomes and remains fit for purpose, has

access to the necessary expertise and the SOLAS brand becomes trusted and well regarded for the

quality of its leadership and support.

Goal 5: Building sector capacity and responsiveness

Goal 6: Building SOLAS capability, organisational effectiveness and brand

The remainder of this document sets out the Corporate Plan itself, including the policy and labour

market context underpinning the Plan, the work programme relating to each of the Goals and an

over-arching Implementation Plan. It is based on extensive research and the gratefully-received

contributions of many FET sector stakeholders.

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Executive Summary

Background and Context

Reform in the further education and training

(FET) sector is part of the Government’s wider

reform of public services. This wider reform

agenda emphasises the need for efficiency,

effectiveness ad value in the deployment of

public funding.

FET reform involves structural change as well

as changes to planning, prioritising, funding

and provision of a diverse range of FET

programmes and services. The absence of

strategic co-ordination and co-operation at

central level has been a feature of the

development of FET and was an obstacle to

providing a better service to all who engaged

with the sector.

A number of other reforms outside of FET are

also impacting on the sector and these

include: the launch and roll-out of ‘Intreo’;

the planned launch of ‘Jobpath’; the

Government’s ‘Pathways to Work’ and ‘Action

Plan for Jobs’ initiatives and the review of the

apprenticeship system.

Government has streamlined the 33 former

VECs into 16 Education and Training Boards

(ETBs) and is completing the planned transfer

of the training function of FÁS into the ETBs

by June 2014 with the aim of bringing local

and regional coherence to FET. The

Government has created a new authority,

SOLAS, the Further Education and Training

Authority, under the aegis of the Department

of Education and Skills. SOLAS is responsible

for the strategic co-ordination and funding of

the further education and training sector.

One of the first major tasks undertaken by

SOLAS was the development of a proposal for

a five-year Strategy for Further Education and

Training and the development of a three-year

SOLAS Corporate Plan. Both have been

completed on schedule.

With regard to the establishment of SOLAS, a

SOLAS Implementation Group (SIG) was set-

up. It focused on the key actions to be taken

to establish SOLAS as part of the reform of the

FET sector, as well as a requirement to

maintain continuity of provision, while at the

same time pursuing a path towards

transformation.

In parallel to the SIG, substantive legislative

changes were also enacted to meet the FET

reform agenda. The Education and Training

Boards Act 2013 provided for the dissolution

of the VECs and the establishment of 16 ETBs.

The Further Education and Training Act 2013

provided for the dissolution of FÁS, the

establishment of SOLAS and the detailing of

the functions of the new organisation. In

addition, the Act specifies the requirement of

SOLAS to submit a three-year Corporate Plan

to the Minister of Education and Skills within

six months of the establishment of SOLAS.

This SOLAS Corporate Plan forms part of an

integrated FET strategic framework that

includes the five-year FET Strategy and a

companion ESRI study ‘Further Education and

Training in Ireland: Past, Present and Future’,

the first ever integrated Annual Services Plan

relating to FET and individual five-year

Strategy Statements and the Annual Service

Plans relating to each of the sixteen ETBs.

The SOLAS Corporate Plan has been

developed at a time when the most recent

data suggests that the Irish economy has

begun to recover somewhat.4 The ESRI and

other commentators forecast that around

4 A Strategy for Growth: Medium Term Economic Strategy 2014 – 2020’ (December 2013). Also the ESRI Quarterly Economic Commentary, Winter, 2013. Also, Central Bank of Ireland Quarterly Bulletin 4 2013.

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60,000 new jobs will be created in 2014, with

unemployment set to fall to around 10% in

2016. The Government is optimistic and the

OECD5 agrees that all of the jobs lost in the

recession can be replaced by 2020. The

labour market also continues to recover

slowly. Employment in all occupations is

expected to increase in the period 2012-

20206. In the broadest sense, overall

employment will increase by less than

100,000 in the weak growth scenario by

approximately 160,000 in the ‘modest’ growth

scenario and by approximately 270,000 in the

‘strong’ growth scenario. In relative terms,

the strongest employment growth is

projected for both higher education and

further education and training qualification

holders, while the employment growth for the

higher secondary and below higher secondary

education categories is projected to be below

the average employment growth.

Funding

In 2014, the Department of Education and

Skills will provide €826m to support Further

Education and Training provision. Of this total,

€640m will be funded through SOLAS,

primarily to fund FET provision by the ETBs.

This includes FET provision provided by both

the former VEC and the FÁS training centre

networks. The balance of €186m of the

€826m overall budget will be utilised to

provide for teacher salaries in the context of

PLC courses and co-operation hours. While

SOLAS will not have responsibility for

payment of teacher salaries, it will have

responsibility for approval of PLC provision

and co-operation hours.

5 OECD (2014), IRELAND’S ACTION PLAN FOR JOBS: A PRELIMINARY REVIEW, APRIL 2014. 6 SOLAS (2014), Occupational Employment Forecasts 2014-2020.

A proportion of the €640m budget funded

through SOLAS will be allocated to support

CPD and professional associations for

example, the Adult Literacy Organisers

Association (ALOA), to support FET Agencies

and Bodies for example, Aontas, NALA and

the Irish National Organisation of the

Unemployed (INOU). A proportion of this

budget will also be allocated to 12 non-ETB

schools/colleges that provide opportunities

relating to PLC and BTEI. In addition, SOLAS

will also co-ordinate funding for specific

organisations within the education and

training sector, such as FIT.

Current FET provision funded by SOLAS is also

offered through the ‘not for profit sector’ as

well as through private trainers using the

contracted training system7 and through

public, ‘not for profit’ and private education

and training providers using Momentum.8 It is

envisaged that funding for flexible delivery

models, such as contracted training and

Momentum will be continued as part of any

new funding arrangements.

Developing the SOLAS Corporate Plan

Clear markers for the SOLAS Corporate Plan

are outlined in the FET Strategy and the

companion ESRI study commissioned by

SOLAS, ‘FET in Ireland: Past, Present and

Future, the new FET legislation, Government

education and activation policy, the ‘Pathways

7 A procurement system supported by SOLAS and operated by the ETBs for the outsourcing and management of training provision where a rapid response is required - such as company closures or start-ups, new course development and testing, or where extended geographic reach is required or where additional volumes of training are required or where specialist expertise is required such as specialist training provision for persons with a disability. 8 Part of the Government’s Jobs Initiative, aimed at long term unemployed persons referred to Momentum by DSP. Public, ‘Not for Profit’ bodies and private education and training providers propose education and training solutions to maximise employment outcomes for participants. A ‘payment by results’ funding model applies to Momentum.

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to Work’ and ‘Action Plan for Jobs’ initiatives,

the Government’s Medium Term Economic

Strategy as well as priorities relating to the

Human Capital Investment Operational

Programme 2014-2020 supported by the ESF9,

and the NESC ‘Strategic Review of Further

Education and Training and the Unemployed’.

There is now a need to elaborate these within

a clear programme of work for SOLAS. This is

set out in Part 3 of this document.

Clear messages were also identified through

further analysis of the 2012 DES-led

consultation on SOLAS functions and

priorities. Additional consultation was

undertaken in 2014 to elicit the views of the

CEOs of the newly established ETBs and of

SOLAS staff. These provided further insights

into the role of SOLAS as the new FET

landscape continues to take shape.

Following these consultations, SOLAS

distinguished a number of key issues

associated with different respondent

constituencies and captured the ideas and

suggestions for how SOLAS should operate

with a view to building consensus around the

SOLAS role. Firstly, almost all stakeholders

agreed that SOLAS needs to be very clear in

what it sees as its vision and mission. This was

crucial to informing the SOLAS Corporate Plan.

Widely-mentioned themes from the

consultations include that SOLAS and/or the

ETBs should continue to encourage and

facilitate the delivery of community education

through community groups; SOLAS should

consult with employers and other relevant

stakeholders about the needs of the labour

market; SOLAS should use the ETBs and local

9 The Programme places education and training in a central role to support people to get jobs; to help young people enter the labour market; to help people in difficulty and those from disadvantaged groups to get skills and jobs and have the same opportunities as others do; to ensure young people complete their education and get the skills that make them more competitive in the job market.

centres as a network for accessing

information on the needs of learners; and,

SOLAS should measure outcomes that relate

to personal development as well as

employment outcomes.

The SOLAS Corporate Plan

The Corporate Plan for SOLAS 2014-2016 sets

out its vision, mission, core principles and high

level goals. The six high level goals are linked

to a programme of priority actions identified

through policy, research and consultation.

SOLAS believes that the high level goals are

necessary, credible, and achievable and

reflect a realistic assessment of the evidence

and the current and projected FET

environment in which SOLAS will operate.

Goals 1 and 2 are included to ensure that FET

resources are targeted to where the need is

greatest and that the new FET planning, new

funding model and new data infrastructure

facilitate and support this:

Goal 1: Enabling delivery of skills for the

economy.

Goal 2: Supporting active inclusion

Goals 3 and 4 are focused on ensuring that

there is a new relationship with employers

and that FET provision is more responsive to

the needs of learners and employers and to

inculcate a spirit of innovation,

entrepreneurship and self-employment:

Goal 3: Empowering learners and employers.

Goal 4: Influencing FET policy and practice

by generating intelligence and supporting

innovation and entrepreneurship

Goals 5 and 6 are focused on ensuring that

the FET sector has the capacity to be

responsive and that it targets its resources to

what works best; and, that SOLAS becomes

and remains fit for purpose, has access to the

necessary expertise and the SOLAS brand

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becomes trusted and well regarded for the

quality of its leadership and support.

Goal 5: Building sector capacity and

responsiveness

Goal 6: Building SOLAS capability, and

organisational effectiveness and brand

While each Goal is listed separately in this

document, they are all of equal value and it

should be stressed that developments in any

one area must be informed by, and will be

integrated with, developments in the other

five areas.

An Overarching Implementation Plan in part 4

of this document sets out the high level Goals,

the strategic objectives linked to each, the

priority actions and key considerations around

delivery. A more detailed Operational Plan

will be developed when the organisation is

fully structured and will set out specific tasks,

performance indicators, ownership and

timelines to drive the implementation of the

Corporate Plan as well as to assist with

planning and monitoring progress in that

regard.

Implementation Costs

A cost proposal will be prepared separately

relating to the areas where additional costs

associated with implementing the SOLAS

Corporate Plan are envisaged.

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Main elements of the SOLAS Corporate Plan, 2014-2016

OVERARCHING IMPLEMENTATION PLAN

Vision

A well-recognised FET sector,

valued for its quality and for

delivery of education, training

and skills that enables learners

to succeed in the labour market

and thrive in society

Core Principles

Evidence-based, Responsive and

flexible, Outward-looking and

learner-centred, Collaborative,

Focused on excellence

Mission

Fund, co-ordinate and monitor a range of FET

provision to ensure economic and social

wellbeing, play our part in influencing and

supporting the development of an FET sector that

is more responsive to the needs of learners and

employers, is innovative, flexible and demand-led

Enabling delivery

of skills for the

economy

Goal 1

Supporting

active inclusion

Goal 2

Empowering

learners &

employers

Goal 3

Influencing FET

policy & practice

by generating

intelligence &

supporting

innovation &

entrepreneurship

Goal 4

Building sector

capacity &

responsiveness

Goal 5

Building SOLAS

capability &

organisational

effectiveness

Goal 6

Strategic Objectives and Work Programme

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Part 1

Background: FET Reform, the Economy and Labour Market, Corporate Plan Development

1.1 Introduction

The SOLAS Corporate Plan is part of an overall process of FET reform that embraces policy, a strategic

planning framework and a renewed focus on implementation. These reforms reflect the changing

national economic and labour market situation which indicates that, in the context of economic

recovery and employment growth, FET provision and qualifications will be increasingly in demand

within the labour market. The main aspects of the FET reform agenda and economic context

underpinning the SOLAS Corporate Plan are elaborated in this section.

1.2 FET Reform and the Establishment of SOLAS

1.2.1 The policy context for FET reform

In July 2011, the Government approved a re-structuring of the further education and training (FET)

sector. This re-structuring is part of the Government’s wider public service reforms, including

education, which emphasise the need for efficiency, effectiveness and value in the deployment of

public funding.

Reform in primary and secondary education is broadly focussed on improving quality, accountability

and supporting inclusion and diversity in schools. Reform in higher education and in further

education and training, is focused on creating the right opportunities for Irish adults. The education

reforms include early education/the framework for early learning, the national literacy and numeracy

strategy, junior-cycle reform, as well as higher education reform.

Reform relating to FET involves structural-level change, as well as changes affecting planning,

prioritising, funding and the provision of FET programmes and services. They are based on an

identified need for a more coherent and effective system of provision.10

A number of other reforms outside of education are also impacting on FET, including:11

• The launch of ‘Intreo’, (2012)

• The planned launch of ‘Jobpath’, (2014)

• The establishment of Quality and Qualifications Ireland, (2012)

• The Government’s ‘Pathways to Work’ Initiative, (2012), (2013)

• The Government’s ‘Action Plan for Jobs’, (2012), (2013), (2014)

• The Review of Apprenticeships in Ireland, (2013)

• The introduction of the Government’s ‘Youth Guarantee’, (2014).

10 National Economic and Social Council (2013), A Strategic Review of Further Education and Training and the Unemployed 11 A summary of these initiatives is provided in Appendix 1

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The reform of FET aimed to provide increased focus on the needs of learners, especially jobseekers.

This involves ensuring that further education and training programmes are modern, flexible and

relevant to labour market skills needs. Two key structural changes were envisaged:

• The first was the establishment of a new authority called SOLAS, responsible for the co-

ordination and funding of further education and training.

• The second was that the former network of thirty three VECs would be amalgamated into sixteen

newly established Education and Training Boards (ETBs). ETBs would deliver most further

education and training programmes funded through the Department of Education and Skills

(DES). FÁS was to be disbanded.

1.2.2 Implementing the FET reform agenda

A SOLAS Implementation Group (SIG) was established to implement these changes in the FET sector.

The group was chaired by the Minister for State with responsibility for Training and Skills, and its

membership included the Department of Education and Skills, FÁS and the Irish Vocational Education

Association.

The Government tasked the SOLAS Implementation Group to draft an Action Plan for the

establishment of SOLAS. The Implementation Group focused on the key actions that should be taken

to establish SOLAS as part of the reform of the FET sector. It also focused on the requirement to

maintain continuity of provision, while at the same time pursuing a path towards transformation. Its

Implementation Plan set out a roadmap in that regard.12In parallel to the SOLAS Implementation

Plan, substantive legislative change was also required to meet the FET reform agenda outlined

above. Consequently, two pieces of legislation were enacted in 2013. They provided the statutory

basis for the dissolution of the VECs, the dissolution of FÁS and the establishment of SOLAS.

With regard to the ETBs, the Education and Training Boards Act was signed into law in May 2013,

replacing nine existing Vocational Training Acts with one piece of legislation. The new Act provided

for the dissolution of the VECs and, through a process involving a merger of most of the existing 33

VECs, for the establishment of 16 ETBs. The key aim of this legislation is to modernise governance

provisions and to more accurately reflect the current mission of ETBs. The functions of the ETBs

were published in the Education and Training Board Act 2013.13

The Further Education and Training Act 2013 was signed into law in July 2013. It provided for the

dissolution of FÁS and the establishment of SOLAS. It enabled the phased transfer of the existing FÁS

training centre network (and associated staff and training provision) to the relevant ETBs. The

legislation also strengthened consultation between SOLAS, DSP, DJEI and employers to improve FET

provision for the activation of unemployed persons on the Live Register and for employers.

The Further Education and Training Act 2013 details the functions of SOLAS.14 In that regard, Section

31:1(a) of the Act specifies the requirement of SOLAS to submit a three year corporate plan to the

Minister within six months of the establishment of SOLAS.

12 http://www.education.ie/en/Publications/Policy-Reports/An-Action-Plan-for-SOLAS.pdf

13 http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/2013/en/act/pub/0011/

14 http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/2013/en/act/pub/0025/

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The reform of FET is taking shape. FÁS has been dissolved, SOLAS has been established and a

network of 16 Education and Training Boards (ETBs) has also been set up. A new landscape in-and-

around FET has emerged. This includes a priority focus on labour market activation and the

establishment and on-going roll out of ‘Intreo’ and ’JobPath’ by the Department of Social Protection

(DSP) to provide employment services and associated supports for unemployed people. Former

qualifications bodies FETAC and HETAC as well as IUQB and NQAI have been amalgamated to form

Quality & Qualifications Ireland (QQI). The Government is also progressing with its Action Plan for

Jobs and a recent review of the apprenticeship system has identified sectors for the expansion of

apprenticeship and other work-based learning.

1.3 The Economic and Labour Market Context for SOLAS Action

The changing economic and labour market situation has significant implications for both the supply

of and demand for FET. These were highlighted in the FET Strategy15 and have influenced the shape

and focus of the SOLAS Corporate Plan.

The international financial collapse had a severe effect on Ireland, partly due to the existence of a

property price bubble and excessive bank lending into the property sector. The economic collapse at

home led to a severe contraction in tax revenues, partly due to an over-reliance on taxes arising from

property development. When combined with the banking-related liabilities that the state accrued as

a result of the banking guarantee, a public finance crisis emerged and led to the EU/IMF bailout in

2010.

The most recent data suggests that the Irish economy has begun to recover somewhat.16 Real GDP

forecasts for 2014 range from 1.8–2.6%. The ESRI forecasts that around 60,000 new jobs will be

created in 2014 with unemployment set to fall to around 10% in 2016. The Government is optimistic

that all of the jobs lost in recession can be replaced by 2020. This view is supported by the OECD.

SOLAS17 is also forecasting significant employment growth in the period 2014-2020.

The labour market also continues to recover slowly. There has been a slight increase in the number

of people in employment from 2011 to 2013. Between Q2 2012 and Q2 2013, unemployment fell

back from 15.0% to 13.9% and subsequently to 12% in January 2014. Approximately 61,000 more

individuals were at work in 2013, bringing total employment to 1,909,800.18

During 2014-2016 and beyond, there are specific opportunities for the FET sector to support the

recovery. These are set out in Table 1 below.

15 Proposal for FET Strategy 2014-2019 and Implementation Plan, Section 3. 16 For example, A Strategy for Growth: Medium Term Economic Strategy 2014 – 2020’ (December 2013). Also the ESRI Quarterly Economic Commentary, Winter, 2013. Also, Central Bank of Ireland Quarterly Bulletin 4, 2013. 17 SOLAS (2014), Skills and Labour Market Research Unit, ‘Employment Projections 2012-2020’. 18 CSO, (2014) Quarterly National Household Survey, Quarter 4, 2013.

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Table 1 - Supporting economic recovery: Opportunities for FET

Employment growth will increase demand for skills

The labour market is expected to grow substantially. Employment growth scenarios, based on growth paths outlined in the ESRI Medium Term Review 2020, have been generated by the SOLAS occupational forecasting model.19 These show a lower limit of 100,000 in the weaker scenario to 270,000 in the strong growth scenario.

Strongest relative employment growth is expected for HE and FET qualifications holders

The number of people employed in the economy with a higher education qualification has risen since the recession struck. Employment levels for those without a Leaving Certificate are down by over 40% and, for those with a Leaving Certificate but without a FET or HE qualification, are also down by around 25%.

The educational distribution of occupational employment is projected to improve further. The share of higher education graduates will increase in all occupations. The share of FET qualifications holders will increase in all occupations except for the professional, associate professional and administrative groups. The share of persons with less than higher secondary education will decline in all occupations.

In relative terms, the strongest employment growth is projected for both HE and FET qualifications holders, while the employment growth for the higher secondary and below higher secondary education categories is projected to be below average employment growth.

Need for an expanded range of FET-related skills in specific sectors

The employer skill needs based on future projections that are most relevant to the FET sector have been identified in a series of Forfás/EGFSN reports.20

An expanding range of FET related skill needs are emerging such as the ‘greening’ of operatives, skilled workers and skilled trades in construction;21 4,500 immediate vacancies at levels NFQ 5/6 in ICT companies in Ireland;22 heritage and conservation skills;23 special skills relating to industrial heritage;24 growth potential of over 3,000 full time equivalent jobs by 2020 in the sea fisheries and aquaculture (farm fish and shell fish) industries;25 Tourism/Hospitality sector culinary, operative, administrative and marketing skills.26

Higher participation rates of older workers in FET

A number of policy measures are encouraging an increasing employment rate for older workers (from 55 to 64 years) in the future.27 More individuals can therefore be expected to ‘dip into’ education and training more frequently, to learn new skills or refresh or upgrade their skillsets so that they can access employment, sustain their employability, change career direction, become more productive, or to insulate themselves against unemployment.

19 See Appendix 2. 20 For example, ‘Guidelines for VECs in aligning further education provision with the skills needs of enterprise 2013 - Update Guidelines for VECs’. Also Forfás, Future Skills Requirements of the Manufacturing Sector to 2020. Also Forfás, Future Skills Requirements of the Wholesale and Retail Sector. Also Forfás, Ireland’s Construction Sector: Outlook and Strategic Plan to 2015. 21 Build Up-Skills Ireland (BUSI), a joint IoT, CIF, ICTU initiative and is part of an EU wide initiative. 22 FIT, (2013), ICT Skills Audit Report. 23 International Council of Monuments and Sites, (2009) ‘Sustaining our Built Environment, Review of the State of Conservation Education and Training in Ireland’. 24 The Industrial Heritage Association of Ireland. 25 Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, (2010), Food Harvest 2020 ‘A Vision for Irish Agri-Food and Fisheries’. 26 Irish Hotels Federation, Irish Restaurants Association and Fáilte Ireland in individual discussions with SOLAS. 27 To a target of 50%.

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Effective access to skills upgrading for low-skilled adults

Improvements in intermediate skills are estimated to generate average annual net benefits of 0.4% and 0.45% of GDP respectively, primarily due to enhanced levels of productivity.28 There is a similar return from investing in low-skilled workers, but they are less likely to be offered, seek or avail of training.29 There is a greater need, therefore, for positive intervention by the FET sector to develop the human capital of low-skilled adults.

A need to raise literacy and numeracy standards

Analysis of the most recent PIAAC data has also shown Ireland to score ‘below average’ in adult literacy and numeracy. In addition, around a quarter (26%) of adults in Ireland score at or below Level 1 on the numeracy scale; compared to just 20% on average across participating countries. Ireland is around the average in problem solving in technology-rich environments.30 The performance of young Irish adults (16-24 years) is below par in literacy and numeracy.

A need for continuous development of labour market intelligence and updating of occupational forecasting

Securing the best returns on investment in skills requires the ability to assess the quality and quantity of the skills available in the population, determine and anticipate the skills required in the labour market, and develop and use those skills effectively in better jobs that lead to better lives.31

Co-existence of skills shortages with high unemployment, and/or persistent evidence of mismatch between employees’ skills and job requirements, indicates that a population’s skills base (and workforce) and the investment made to develop those skills may be partly wasted. Building effective systems of labour market/skill intelligence, planning and funding can mitigate this problem.

Increasing the acquisition rate for major awards

While Ireland continues to make progress towards achieving ‘top line’ targets in the National Skills Strategy (NSS), the ESRI research indicates that, in terms of accreditation, a relatively low proportion of FET graduates/leavers in 2012 gained a major award (24%), with just over 2,000 (or 5% of total number of major award holders) gaining major awards at levels 1-3 combined. This indicates the challenge for the FET sector to increase the number of individuals who achieve major awards, and particularly awards at the lower levels.

Responding to FET skill needs of IDA- and EI-supported companies

IDA and EI have a clear understanding of the skill needs (relevant to both FET and HE) required to attract and sustain the companies supported by them. These companies have specific skill needs and are located throughout the country. The ETBs have a presence in every county in Ireland and have a comparative advantage in that regard over other providers. It is essential that the relevant FET skill needs of IDA and EI supported companies (existing and new) are identified to the relevant ETB and DSP and addressed by them locally in the most appropriate and timely manner.

28 For example: Expert Group on Future Skills Needs (2007) ‘Tomorrow’s Skills: Towards a National Skills Strategy’, 5th Report, Dublin: Forfás. See also Leitch, L. (2006) ‘Prosperity for All in a Global Economy–world class skills’, Final Report, London: HM Treasury. See also Brown, P., Green, A., Lauder, H. (2001) ‘High Skills: Globalisation, Competitiveness and Skill Formation’, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 29 O’Connell, P.J. (2007) ‘Who generally trains? The effects of personal and workplace characteristics on training at work’, Apeldoom: Het Spinhuis and Dublin ESRI. 30 OECD, (2013), Skills Outlook 2013: Results from the Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC). 31 OECD Skills Strategy; Developing the right skills and turning them into better jobs and better lives.

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1.4 The Strategic Framework for the SOLAS Corporate Plan

The SOLAS Corporate Plan is part of a four-stranded strategic framework for FET:

1) The first strand is the five year FET Strategy 2014-2019, now agreed and adopted by Government,

along with a companion ESRI study, ‘Further Education and Training in Ireland: Past, Present and

Future’, commissioned by SOLAS as part of the FET Strategy development process. An overarching

FET Strategy Implementation Plan and a more detailed Operational Plan sets out the specific tasks,

performance indicators, ownership and timelines relating to the main FET Stakeholders including

SOLAS, to drive the implementation of the FET Strategy, as well as to assist with planning and

monitoring progress in that regard.

2) The second strand includes the first ever integrated Annual Services Plan relating to FET. The Plan

sets out for the first time, ‘base-line’ details around the type, mix and volume of programmes and

services to be delivered by the FET sector in 2014, as well as the associated funding and estimated

outcomes relating to programmes and services. The integrated FET Services Plan consists largely of

sixteen ETB Plans for 2014 ‘rolled up’ into one national ‘Services Plan’.

3) The third strand is this SOLAS Corporate Plan. While the FET Strategy outlines the way forward for

key actors in the sector, including SOLAS, the SOLAS Corporate Plan outlines the specific contribution

that SOLAS will make to progress the FET Strategy and provide clarity on how SOLAS will deliver its

mandate as set out in the Further Education and Training Act 2013, including the management of

strategic FET programmes such as Momentum and e-College.

4) The fourth strand includes individual five-year Strategy Statements and the Annual Service Plans

relating to each of the sixteen ETBs. The former outlines the way in which the ETBs propose to

develop and deliver their programmes and services over a five year period, while the latter sets out

the type and volume of programmes and services that will be provided each year. Again, both will be

informed, inter alia, by the FET Strategy, Government priorities as well as learner and local employer

needs.

1.5 The Programme and Funding Context

1.5.1 Funding for FET: A diverse landscape

The full extent of FET provision in the State is very broad-ranging and includes many actors in

addition to the former VECs and FÁS. The FET Strategy has identified the diversity and tradition of

FET provision, as well as its accessibility to a very diverse profile of learners as key strengths.

Targeting programmes at National Framework of Qualifications (NFQ) levels 1-6, including both

accredited and unaccredited provision, FET supports individuals to achieve career and employment

as well as personal, developmental and social aspirations, tackling skills shortages and boosting the

future growth and competitiveness of the Irish economy. FET also plays an important role in helping

people to lead fulfilling lives, supporting individuals of all abilities to achieve their potential.

In excess of 200,000 people will enrol in DES-funded FET in 2014. In terms of the annual budget of

the FET sector, excluding allowances in lieu of eligible DSP income supports, in 2012 the Department

for Education and Skills (DES) spent €309.5m on a range of programmes primarily delivered through

the former VECs. In the region of €117.0m million was spent on training formerly provided by FÁS,

while €50m was spent on a range of adult literacy and community development programmes

(including the Adult Literacy and Community Education Scheme) with a further €50m of funding

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provided to Pobal.32 In 2014, the Department of Education and Skills will provide €826m to support

Further Education and Training provision of which €640m will be funded directly through SOLAS.

1.5.2 SOLAS funding

SOLAS is funded through the Department of Education and Skills. Expenditure during the 2014

transition phase will include training centre costs run by SOLAS in the first half of the year and

contracted out costs and the grant aid of those costs in the second half of the year after the transfer

to the Education and Training Boards (ETBs) is completed. It will also include the grant aid of ETBs

and non ETBs for further education. From 2015, SOLAS will fund places for FET through ETBs,

excluding the teacher pay element of the PLC programme. This includes FET provision provided by

the former VEC and the former FÁS training centre networks.

Funding will consist primarily of grant aid for further education and training, with direct expenditure

arising on some programmes being managed by SOLAS together with the administration costs of

SOLAS. The FET sector will require a dedicated capital budget to maintain and progress FET over the

life-time of the FET Strategy and to ensure improvements to (or construction of) facilities or to

purchase new (or improve existing) campus and training centre equipment and infrastructures,

including networks, other information technology investments and for capital maintenance to keep

facilities/estates in good repair.

A proportion of the €640m budget will be allocated by SOLAS to support CPD and professional

associations, for example the Adult Literacy Organisers Association (ALOA) to FET Agencies and

Bodies for example, Aontas, NALA and the Irish National Organisation for the Unemployed (INOU). A

proportion of the budget will also be allocated to 12 non-ETB school/colleges that provide

opportunities relating to PLC and BTEI. In addition, SOLAS will also co-ordinate funding for specific

organisations within the education and training sector.

Current FET provision funded by SOLAS is also offered through the ‘not for profit sector’ as well as

through private trainers using the contracted training system33 and through public, ‘not for profit’

and private education and training providers using Momentum.34 It is envisaged that funding for

flexible delivery models, such as contracted training and Momentum will be continued as part of any

new funding arrangements.

Finally, a total of €186m of the €826m overall budget will be utilised to provide for teacher salaries in

the context of PLC courses and co-operation hours. While SOLAS will not have responsibility for

payment of teacher salaries, it will have responsibility for approval of PLC provision and co-operation

hours.

1.6 Developing the SOLAS Corporate Plan

The process of developing the SOLAS Corporate Plan has drawn on the extensive contributions and

views of a wide range of stakeholders, available research and intelligence about the economic and

32 It should be noted that expenditures to private providers could not be separated out in this data. 33 A procurement system supported by SOLAS and operated by the ETBs for the outsourcing and management of training provision where a rapid response is required - such as company closures or start-ups, new course development and testing, or where extended geographic reach is required or where additional volumes of training are required or where specialist expertise is required such as specialist training provision for persons with a disability. 34 Part of the Government’s Jobs Initiative, aimed at long term unemployed persons referred to Momentum by DSP. Public, ‘Not for Profit’ bodies and private education and training providers propose education and training solutions to maximise employment outcomes for participants. A ‘payment by results’ funding model applies to Momentum.

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labour market context for FET provision and future skills demand; and the evolving policy and

programme priorities in Ireland.

As well as the FET Strategy and the companion ESRI study commissioned by SOLAS, ‘FET in Ireland:

Past, Present and Future’, a number of additional initiatives and reports have been used to provide

clear markers for this Corporate Plan. These include: the SOLAS Implementation Group (SIG) Action

Plan; the new legislative framework around FET and, in particular, the Education and Training Act

2013 setting out the functions of SOLAS; the Pathways to Work and the Action Plan for Jobs

initiatives; the Government’s Medium Term Economic Strategy; priorities relating to the Human

Capital Investment Operational Programme 2014-2020 supported by the ESF35; and the NESC

‘Strategic Review of Further Education and Training and the Unemployed’.

In terms of the views of stakeholders, further analysis was undertaken of the results of the 2012

consultation on SOLAS roles and functions. The Corporate Plan also incorporates observation and

reflection on the results of the 2014 wider consultations on the FET Strategy. This was augmented by

further follow-up consultation to elicit the views of the CEOs of the newly-established ETBs and

SOLAS staff. These provided further insights into the role of SOLAS. From these contributions, SOLAS

was able to identify clear ideas and suggestions on how SOLAS should operate with a view to building

a consensus around the SOLAS role and agenda for action.

Key messages to emerge from the development process and review of research were that, while it is

acknowledged that there are many examples of high-quality provision within the richly-diverse FET

sector today, there are difficulties in systematically understanding ‘how’ and ‘how effectively’ the FET

sector as a whole is contributing to economic success, as well as social inclusion and mobility. This

raises fundamental questions:

Is the balance of FET provision right to ensure the best deal for learners and employers?

How should the trade-offs between competing priorities for funding be managed and based on

what evidence?

What support does the FET sector need to provide relevant and appropriate skills that will make a

tangible difference to learners?

SOLAS, working in partnership with the sector, will strive to tackle these and other questions within

the context of the reform of FET and the four-strand strategic framework outlined above. The SOLAS

starting point will be the ‘outcomes’ of FET – what it achieves for learners, employers and

communities. The potential gains from FET provision are substantial. The SOLAS Corporate Plan is

based on harnessing this potential to maximum effect. In addition, while the new infrastructure of

ETBs covering local areas underpins FET integration, it creates, for SOLAS, a short- to medium-term

need to support and take account of the substantial transition for the sector as a whole.

35 The Programme places education and training in a central role to support people to get jobs; to help young people enter the labour market; to help people in difficulty and those from disadvantaged groups to get skills and jobs and have the same opportunities as others do; to ensure young people complete their education and get the skills that make them more competitive in the job market.

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The SOLAS Corporate Plan therefore embodies clear messages about:

• How the organisation will work with partners (potentially filling multiple roles – funding, a

supporting role for the sector and a monitoring role)

• What it expects to achieve (and how, therefore, its success can be measured).

The next sections translate these messages into a programme of work for SOLAS.

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Part 2

Overview of the Corporate Plan

2.1 Introduction

This Corporate Plan sets out the SOLAS Vision, its Mission, as well as the Core Principles defining how

SOLAS will operate. The Plan is based around six high-level goals, five of which are outward facing,

the sixth internally focussed in support of the other five goals. The six goals drive the focus of SOLAS

work over the next three years, including strategic objectives and key actions that SOLAS believes will

make the major difference in delivering on its remit. These goals are necessary, credible, and

achievable and reflect a realistic assessment of the evidence and the current and projected FET

environment in which SOLAS will operate.

2.2 SOLAS Vision

Our Vision is to achieve a well-recognised FET sector, valued for its quality and for delivery of

education, training and skills that enables learners to succeed in the labour market and thrive in

society.

2.3 SOLAS Mission

Our mission is to fund, co-ordinate and monitor a range of FET provision to ensure economic and

social wellbeing, play our part in progressing, influencing and supporting the development of a FET

sector that is more responsive to the needs of learners and employers, is innovative, flexible and

demand-led.

2.4 SOLAS Core Principles

In order to realise the Vision and the Mission of SOLAS, the following core principles underpin the

SOLAS Corporate Plan. These take into account the actions identified for SOLAS and its partners in

order to implement the FET Strategy and transform the FET sector, as well as reflecting feedback

from the consultation process.

SOLAS will be:

• Evidence-based: Ensuring there is robust intelligence to inform the planning, funding and design

of new and existing FET provision

• Responsive and flexible: Promoting innovation and the funding of provision that meets

identified needs

• Outward-looking and learner-centred: Being open to new ideas, proactive in seeking out

evidence of ‘what works’ in FET and ensuring that the learner experience is at the centre of

decision-making

• Collaborative: Focusing on adding value by fostering collaboration across the FET sector, sharing

learning and empowering delivery organisations

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• Focused on excellence: Maintaining a central focus on standards and quality in FET, including

excellence in programme development and the on-going professional development of the FET

workforce, as well as promoting and embodying best practice in corporate governance.

2.5 The SOLAS High-Level Goals

Goal 1: Enabling delivery of skills for the economy

SOLAS will develop and implement a new framework for the planning and funding of FET based on a

defined and measureable set of outcomes, which reflect the full breadth of the FET contribution to

the economy and society. SOLAS will put in place systems for the effective monitoring of learner

outcomes across the diverse FET provider base. Over time, SOLAS will use new evidence about ‘what

works’ alongside intelligence on skill needs to inform funding priorities and ensure value for money.

Goal 2: Supporting Active Inclusion

SOLAS will ensure that funding is targeted at those groups most in need and FET delivery supports

individuals to progress in learning. SOLAS will develop options for integrating and embedding literacy

and numeracy skills in mainstream FET provision, and enable learners to achieve recognition and

accreditation wherever possible.

Goal 3: Empowering learners and employers

SOLAS will ensure that learners and employers are at the heart of a FET sector that is accessible,

transparent and accountable. SOLAS will proactively seek their views, understand their priorities and

ensure that they have the necessary information to make decisions about learning. SOLAS will also

support moves to ensure that FET provision is responsive to the needs and expectations of learners

and employers and based on clear pathways to employment and further learning.

Goal 4: Influencing FET policy and practice by generating intelligence and supporting innovation

and entrepreneurship

SOLAS will be one focal point alongside ETBs, employers and learners for new ideas and evidence on

the effectiveness of FET education. Working alongside ETBs, employers and learners, SOLAS will be a

focal point for the generation of research and intelligence on the demand for skills and further

education, on ‘what works’ and stimulating innovation and entrepreneurship in the sector.

Goal 5: Building sector capacity and responsiveness

Through the effective transition of the former FÁS training centre network, associated staff and

training provision, SOLAS will facilitate capacity building and development of synergies within the

sector that can lead to better services for learners and employers.

Goal 6: Building SOLAS capability and organisational effectiveness

In order to provide strategic direction and lead change in the FET sector, SOLAS too will need to be

responsive, effective and flexible. SOLAS will strive to operate to the highest standards of public

service delivery at all times and will deploy its resources to be an enabler to ETBs and other FET

providers that are delivering positive outcomes and in this way to achieve a better service for

learners and employers.

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2.6 Connecting the Main Elements of the SOLAS Corporate Plan

The diagram below (Figure 1) summarises the main elements of the Plan. While each Goal is listed

separately in this document, they are all of equal value and it should be stressed that developments

in any one area must be informed by, and will be integrated with, developments in the other five

areas.

Underpinning each of the six high-level Goals, SOLAS has developed a series of strategic objectives to

elaborate how the Goals will be met and to operationalise the priorities for action. These strategic

objectives are summarised in Table 2 below. Part 3 of the Corporate Plan provides the rationale and

detail of the SOLAS work programme linked to each of the strategic objectives. It also sets out a set

of performance measures that begin to capture how SOLAS will judge and be judged as achieving

these goals and fulfilling its remit.

Part 4 sets out an over-arching Implementation Plan. Three-monthly progress reports will be made

by SOLAS on progress in implementing the SOLAS Corporate Plan and corrective action identified (if

required). A more detailed Operational Plan will be developed when the organisation is fully

structured and will set out specific tasks, performance indicators, ownership and timelines to drive

the implementation of the SOLAS Corporate Plan as well as to assist with planning and monitoring

progress in that regard.

Linked activity supporting the implementation of the SOLAS Corporate Strategy consists of:

• The FET Strategy and its associated Implementation Plan

• A national annual integrated FET Services Plan managed by SOLAS

• Individual 5 year strategic plans developed and managed by ETBs and further supported by

individual annual services plans developed and managed by ETB

Figure 1 - Overview of the Corporate Plan

OVERARCHING IMPLEMENTATION PLAN

Vision

A well-recognised FET sector,

valued for its quality and for

delivery of education, training

and skills that enables learners to

succeed in the labour market and

thrive in society

Core Principles

Evidence-based, Responsive and

flexible, Outward-looking and

learner-centred, Collaborative,

Focused on excellence.

Mission

Fund, co-ordinate and monitor a range of FET

provision to ensure economic and social wellbeing,

play our part in influencing and supporting the

development of an FET sector that is more

responsive to the needs of learners and employers,

is innovative, flexible and demand-led.

Enabling delivery

of skills for the

economy

Goal 1

Supporting

active inclusion

Goal 2

Empowering

learners &

employers

Goal 3

Influencing FET

policy & practice

by generating

intelligence &

supporting

innovation &

entrepreneurship

Goal 4

Building sector

capacity &

responsiveness

Goal 5

Building SOLAS

capability &

organisational

effectiveness

Goal 6

Strategic Objectives and Work Programme

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Table 2: List of strategic objectives to achieve the SOLAS goals

High Level Goals Strategic Objectives

Enabling delivery of skills for the economy

Strategic Objective 1 - Put in place a framework of outcomes relevant to the breadth of FET programmes including completion, progression, employment and certification. Strategic Objective 2 – Develop a revised funding model that ensures resources are most-effectively targeted according to learner/employer skills needs and ‘what works’ in terms of effective provision. Strategic Objective 3 - Implement an integrated planning process. Strategic Objective 4 - Put in place a data infrastructure to inform decision-making and assist ETBs and other providers in the consistent capturing of outcomes data, feedback and analysis.

Supporting Active Inclusion

Strategic Objective 1 – Ensure effective targeting of provision and outcomes for priority groups. Strategic Objective 2 – Identify and address barriers to participation. Strategic Objective 3 – Support new forms of delivery and awareness-raising activity to increase engagement with literacy and numeracy provision. Strategic Objective 4 – Embed basic skills provision within mainstream FET provision. Strategic Objective 5 – Increase the opportunities for learners to achieve accreditation in order to support progression.

Empowering learners and employers

Strategic Objective 1 – Ensure transparency about FET provision, providing learners and employers with the necessary information about learning opportunities to make informed choices. Strategic Objective 2 – Enable flexible, high-quality FET provision in line with learner and employer expectations. Strategic Objective 3 - Promote the value of FET qualifications by ensuring that they enable progression. Strategic Objective 4 - Enable learners and employers to directly influence FET provision.

Influencing FET policy and practice by generating intelligence and supporting innovation and entrepreneurship

Strategic Objective 1 - Undertake and commission targeted strategic research and reviews to support the development of the sector. Strategic Objective 2 - Stimulate innovation and entrepreneurship in the sector by proactively seeking out good practice and providing support for the piloting, testing and scaling-up new ideas that are shown to work. Strategic Objective 3 – Provide a comprehensive view of the effectiveness of current programmes and the potential of new approaches through evaluation. Strategic Objective 4 – Ensure widespread use of FET intelligence and promote understanding of the sector.

Building sector capacity and responsiveness

Strategic Objective 1 – Ensure smooth and effective transition to the new ETB-led FET delivery model so that learners experience continuity of service and that, over time, ETBs and other providers have the capacity to meet their objectives. Strategic Objective 2 – Ensure that the FET workforce has the necessary skills and knowledge to respond to the priorities set out in the FET strategy. Strategic Objective 3 – Provide sector advocacy to ensure a joined-up approach on designing and implementing skills policy.

Building SOLAS capability, organisational effectiveness and brand

Strategic Objective 1 – Install an effective SOLAS Structure. Strategic Objective 2 – Improve SOLAS capability. Strategic Objective 3 – Develop a Communications and Branding Strategy.

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Part 3

The SOLAS Work Programme and Measures of Success

The work programme sets out how the six high-level goals for the period 2014 to 2016 can be achieved. The goals are inter-linked (see Figure 2 below). These goals and their related strategic objectives are the key strands of action that make-up the SOLAS work programme.

Figure 2 – The relationship between the six high-level goals

3.1 Enabling Delivery of Skills for the Economy

3.1.1 To put in place a framework of outcomes relevant to the breadth of FET programme including completion, progression, employment and certification

SOLAS intends to develop an outcomes framework for the FET sector in collaboration with ETBs,

providers, learners and employer representatives. This will provide a comprehensive overview of the

full range of success measures relevant to FET provision. The outcomes framework will be a tool for

moving towards consistency in monitoring and evaluating the effectiveness of FET provision.

Systems for the effective monitoring of agreed learner outcomes across all FET provision will be

installed. Over time, SOLAS will gather evidence about ‘what works’, as well as evidence on existing

and emerging skill needs to inform planning and funding priorities and to ensure value for money.

These two Goals are to ensure that FET resources are targeted to where the need is greatest and that the

new FET planning, new funding model and new data infrastructure facilitates and supports this.

Goal 1: Enabling delivery of skills for the economy.

Goal 2: Supporting active inclusion.

These two Goals are focused on ensuring that there is a new relationship with employers and that FET

provision is more responsive to the needs of learners and employers and to inculcate a spirit of

innovation, entrepreneurship and self-employment.

Goal 3: Empowering learners and employers.

Goal 4: Influencing FET policy and practice by generating intelligence and supporting

innovation and entrepreneurship

These two Goals are focused on ensuring that the FET sector has the capacity to be responsive and

targets its resources to what works best; that SOLAS becomes and remains fit for purpose, has access

to the necessary expertise and that the SOLAS brand becomes trusted and well regarded for the quality

of its leadership and support.

Goal 5: Building sector capacity and responsiveness.

Goal 6: Building SOLAS capability and organisational effectiveness and brand.

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This evidence-based approach is expected to enable improved targeting of public investment to

where it is most needed, where the benefits are greatest and as a result, the effectiveness of

different types of provision can be identified.

In order to balance different learner needs, it is important to have a comprehensive, integrated range of agreed FET outcomes. These outcomes may include;

placement in employment

progression in employment

progression to higher-level learning

‘softer’ outcomes, such as increased confidence that enables learners to become more active

citizens or move closer to the labour market.

The roll-out of a framework will consist of working with partners to address gaps in information

availability and the testing of the proportionality and appropriateness of the agreed outcome

measures applying across the full range of FET programmes. The objective is to have an agreed and

effective framework that can be used by the ETB sector to support continuous improvement, inform

planning decisions and allocation of funding.

3.1.2 Develop a revised funding model that ensures resources are most effectively targeted according to learner/employer skills needs and ‘what works’ in terms of effective provision

SOLAS will set the parameters with ETBs, DES, DSP, DJEI, and other relevant partners for channelling

the annual investment in FET to ensure maximum impact and value for money. In the past,

substantial parts of FET funding have been distributed based on legacy formulae rather than

evidence-based needs. Research and consultation undertaken as part of the development of the FET

Strategy indicates a need to change the current approach to an outcomes based model that targets

public investment towards high performing FET provision in terms of meeting learner and employer

needs.

A set of principles will underpin the new FET funding model:

Future funding will be outcomes-based and focused on achieving value for money.

Ensuring the development and roll-out of new programmes at national level is managed by

SOLAS and development and roll-out of new programmes also takes place at local level by ETBs

to respond to both nationally-driven further education and training requirements and

regional/local priorities.

FET delivery will be through providers that can efficiently offer innovation, value, high-quality

learning and positive outcomes for learners and employers. All provision, whether directly

delivered by public providers or contracted-out will be expected to meet the same quality

standards for delivery.

The funding model will embed a focus on contributing to labour market activation and the

Pathways to Work and Action Plan for Jobs Initiatives, while ensuring that the measures of

success take account of a sector that delivers across both the social and economic spectrum.

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Currently, only a relatively small proportion of learners achieve a major award, with the vast

majority of FET learners gaining minor awards, especially at levels 1-336. The five-year FET

strategy identifies a need to ensure that FET resources are allocated to support more learners at

levels 1-6 to graduate from FET programmes with major awards. In this way SOLAS can play a

leading role in advancing the relevant National Skills Strategy targets. SOLAS will explore how the

funding model can be used to meet this ambition.

The ETBs and other providers will retain responsibility for planning and managing provision in each

local area – being attuned to the needs of local employers and communities. SOLAS will advise on

national priorities, ensuring that sufficient focus is given to growth sectors, STEM skills and areas

where skill needs or employment opportunities have been identified, such as ICT, Hospitality, ‘Green’

skills.

3.1.3 Implement an integrated planning process

SOLAS will lead the allocation of funding under the new outcomes-based model through the

identification of national and local priorities that inform the annual integrated FET Services Plan.

Priorities to meet learner and employer skill needs will be identified by SOLAS at national level using

the existing infrastructure such as EGFSN, the DSP Labour Market Council and the planned HEI

clusters and the Department of the Environment, Community and Local Government led local

economic and social councils (LEOs). SOLAS will also collaborate with the HEA to conduct a survey of

employers’ views of the effectiveness of both HET and FET provision. This will complement local

labour market intelligence gathering mechanisms by the ETBs themselves.

The new planning process will be introduced on a phased basis. Funding criteria will be set to inform

the allocations and plans of ETBs and other providers, and will be based on meeting the ambitions of

the five-year FET strategy.

The planning model will have a clear focus on reducing duplication and overlap of provision, as well

as to ensure the availability of relevant, learner-centred, flexible employment-led provision, while

taking account of Government priorities (e.g. Pathways to Work; the Action Plan for Jobs; the Youth

Guarantee).

A collaborative approach to planning FET provision is at the heart of the complementary roles of

SOLAS, the ETBs and other providers. SOLAS will work in partnership with the ETBs and other

providers to support them to undertake their mandated role effectively and efficiently. While SOLAS

will retain strategic oversight to ensure that the cumulative effort of ETB-funded provision meets

local and national needs in the context of a planning process that promotes and rewards innovation,

flexibility and responsiveness.

SOLAS will use funding agreements to ensure ETBs and other funded organisations retain ownership

over their own planning within national guidelines, while ensuring consistency in approach and

quality across the regions. SOLAS will ensure that organisations in receipt of funding have sufficient

freedom to meet local needs within a clearly-defined national framework. SOLAS will sustain funding

for existing levels of contracted-out provision and other models such as Momentum that offer high

levels of responsiveness and flexibility.

36 ESRI (2014), Further Education and Training in Ireland; Past, Present and Future.

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3.1.4 Put in place a data infrastructure to inform decision-making and assist ETBs and other providers in the consistent capturing of outcomes, data, feedback and analysis

The five-year FET strategy emphasises the current weaknesses in the data infrastructure (such as the

multiplicity of data-gathering systems across FET and the lack of systematic data collection). As a

result there has in the past been limited use of data in decision-making at all levels of policy and

practice. In order to make effective, evidence-based funding decisions in future, this situation has to

change.

The outcomes framework and future funding model depend on having effective systems for

consistently recording learner progress across the spectrum of FET provision. SOLAS will take a lead

role, with the support of its FET partners such as DES, ETBs, QQI and DSP, to develop and install a fit-

for-purpose FET data infrastructure consisting of the following elements:

A National Course Database (a ‘live’ tool listing all relevant programme details such as content,

certification and learning outcomes)

A National Course Calendar identifying when courses are due to start and where they are

available

A ‘real time’ National Learner Database to track learners and provide the basic performance

measures that can be used to inform future funding decisions (learner profiles, completion rates,

the cost-effectiveness of provision)

Research to identify labour market outcomes for learners across the spectrum of FET, including

the longer-term destinations of learners, whether this is employment or further study, in order

to build a robust picture of the wider benefits of learning.

Scoping work has already started on the programme database, national course calendar and national

learner tracking system and is likely to take a number of years before all of these systems are

embedded across the whole of the FET sector. However, it is anticipated that the long-term benefits

will be substantial.

3.2 Supporting Active Inclusion

3.2.1 Ensure effective targeting of provision and outcomes for priority groups

The new SOLAS funding model will take account of the need to support the active inclusion of people

of all abilities whether they self-refer or are referred by DSP to ETBs for further education and

training. SOLAS will ensure that FET also serves the needs of priority groups identified by DSP,

including long-term unemployed people, lone parents, young unemployed persons and people with

disabilities.

There are two strands to the SOLAS role in this regard:

Ensuring that suitable FET programmes and services are available by advising ETBs and other

providers about what constitutes effective provision for different target groups based on

evidence emerging through the research

Supporting FET providers to offer sufficient high-quality provision for priority groups that make

active inclusion a reality.

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There are also specific strands of FET funding that play a crucial role in supporting active inclusion.

Funding for community-based learning will be sustained until the new funding model is rolled out. In

the meantime, and central to community provision having a more positive impact on individuals and

society, is a need to establish clear FET access and progression routes. In that regard, SOLAS will work

with the community education sector, the HEA, HEIs, QQI and DES.

Funding for adult literacy and numeracy will also be sustained until a sufficient evidence base exists

to inform the most appropriate approach to adopt with regard to embedding literacy and numeracy

provision across all relevant forms of FET provision.

3.2.2 Identify and address barriers to participation in FET

Examples of mechanisms that could be structured into FET to address barriers to participation

include:

Identifying and understanding the nature of the barriers which cause learning breakdown and lead to exclusion

Supporting a commitment to identify and adopt best practice mechanisms which exist within FET and which have been used or can be used to break down barriers and meet the range of needs which are present.

SOLAS in collaboration with a range of FET partners will also need to identify those mechanisms

which need to be developed which will enable diversity to be accommodated in an integrated system

of FET such as innovative practices for recognising and accommodating diversity; activities that

advocate against discrimination and challenge attitudes; training programmes which equip FET staff

to deal with diverse needs.

3.2.3 Support new forms of delivery and awareness-raising activity to increase engagement with literacy and numeracy provision

The five-year FET strategy highlights that while there has been rapid expansion of third level

education, the proportion of working-age adults in Ireland with, at most, lower secondary education

remains only at average level compared to other EU or OECD countries. Ireland is below the OECD

average in terms of adult literacy and numeracy skills.

There is a risk that any focus on investing in high-value skills can mean that parts of the adult

population are left behind. Low levels of literacy and numeracy, as well as inadequacies in digital

literacy, are associated with poor educational outcomes; serving as a fundamental barrier to

individuals being able to actively and effectively engage in society. SOLAS will support the

implementation of the literacy and numeracy strategy in line with our statutory role. In that regard

SOLAS will host a national committee to oversee the promotion of higher levels of engagement with

the national literacy and numeracy programme. It will provide for a co-ordinated approach to

awareness-raising.

3.2.4 Embed basic skills provision within mainstream FET provision

The way in which literacy and numeracy provision is delivered needs to evolve so that it is integrated

or embedded, as appropriate, into mainstream FET provision. This is no easy task, and, in the first

instance, SOLAS will lead research into how literacy and numeracy can and should be embedded

across different FET programmes. This will draw on international best practice regarding the delivery

of basic skills provision. It will consider the ramifications of any new proposed approach in terms of

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the pre-assessment of learner basic skill levels, course design and delivery and required FET teaching

expertise, as well as any resource implications.

3.2.5 Increase opportunities for learners to achieve accreditation in order to support progression

As part of the development of the new outcomes framework to underpin FET funding and

monitoring, SOLAS will explore whether accreditation should be introduced across the whole

spectrum of FET provision. The principle should be that all individuals have the opportunity to have

their learning accredited, wherever possible.

There is no upfront assumption that accreditation can feasibly be introduced for all programmes,

certainly over the lifetime of this Corporate Plan – but, as minimum, all programmes should be

associated with appropriate outcome metrics as part of a comprehensive framework that recognises:

The different purposes of FET programmes

That all FET programmes can be viewed in the context of a common path to inclusion,

engagement in society, progression in learning and employment.

As part of this work, SOLAS will aim to clarify and make more transparent the basis on which

provision is accredited or not-accredited. With the presumption that accreditation is of value to

learners, there will need to be a clear case for funding non-accredited learning.

3.3 Empowering Learners and Employers

3.3.1 Ensure transparency in FET provision, by providing learners and employers with the necessary information about learning opportunities in order to make informed choices

SOLAS will need to facilitate wider promotion and awareness-raising actions for the FET sector as a

whole, so that learners and employers have a good understanding of the range of options and

provision available to them. The needs of learners including employees as well as employers will

need to be supported by SOLAS from their first point of engagement with FET through to the learning

experience and beyond. SOLAS will engage with the National Centre for Guidance in Education, DES

and DSP, ETBs and others with regard to the development of an integrated guidance service for the

sector.

SOLAS will support work to ensure that career guidance initiatives are systematically evaluated to

establish what works best and ensure a robust evidence base into best practice on how guidance can

be integrated into the learner journey. The development of a National Course Database and National

Course Calendar during 2014, led by SOLAS, will provide practical tools for individuals looking to

make informed decisions with regard to suitable and relevant FET opportunities.

3.3.2 Enable flexible, high-quality FET provision in line with learner and employer expectations

Engagement with FET should be straightforward for learners and employers. Through the funding

mechanism SOLAS will strive to foster increased flexibility for learners, including flexible entry and

exit points, modular provision, blended learning and e-learning. SOLAS will also support the

incorporation of extended high quality and structured work placements and on-the-job training

where relevant to programmes.

SOLAS will co-ordinate the drafting of a Learner Charter for FET in collaboration with the relevant FET

Stakeholders such as ETBs, learner and employers. The Charter will set out the standards of

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delivery/service that learners can expect from FET providers, including employers who provide in-

company placements.

According to the QQI37, quality assurance is a system(s) put in place by a provider to maintain and

improve the quality of its education and training programme. QQI quality assurance requirements

are primarily set in the context of validation of programmes leading to a QQI award. The desired

programme of quality will be influenced by the provider’s goals as well as its external obligations (for

example, to regulators and to statutory and professional bodies). QQI intends to develop and

implement a corporate responsibility model for quality of provision in FET on similar lines to that in

higher education. In other words, all individuals engaged in or supporting FET, including teachers and

instructors will take responsibility for quality and in meeting the QA policy and procedures set by

QQI.

SOLAS, on the other hand, understands quality in a context where it is obliged to assure itself of the

quality of the funding investment in FET. SOLAS needs to make judgements about the performance

of individual ETBs and specific elements of their provision against what was agreed with SOLAS in

terms of how the funding is to allocated and the expected outcomes arising from that allocation,

including minimum acceptable levels of learner success rates. Success rates may be defined as the

percentage of learners who start and course and/or who complete it successfully and achieve the

planned employment and progression outcomes as well as a qualification.

However not all FET is accredited. Many FET programmes in adult education that will be funded by

SOLAS may not be accredited. In many instances this may be acceptable although every effort should

be made to introduce the relevant certification where it is appropriate and if such an award exists.

Where certification is deemed by SOLAS and the provider not to be appropriate, a broad and

coherent set of measures of success that properly recognises learners’ achievements38 needs to be

identified by the provider with learner agreement. For example, there must be clearly stated aim(s)

for the programme, identification of learner starting points, statement of distance travelled (skills,

knowledge and competence learned) and by when. Records of learner self-assessment, group and

peer assessment, tutor records of assessment activities and individual or group progress and

achievement to demonstrate progress in meeting the course aim will be required.

While QQI quality assurance requirements around FET provision leading to a QQI approved award is

bound to overlap with SOLAS requirements around assurance of its funding investment, SOLAS will

also need to look at provider funding plans that incorporate particular improvement targets that

include learner number targets for certain cohorts identified by DES/DSP such as LTUs and young

unemployed persons as well as employer engagement targets, success measures and teacher

qualifications. In addition, SOLAS intends to measure learner and employer satisfaction with the

quality and effectiveness of FET provision for benchmarking purposes. All of these tools including QQI

quality assurance for certification purposes and associated QQI quality monitoring reports on SOLAS

funded FET providers will assist SOLAS to assure its overall funding investment in FET. Developing

synergies between SOLAS and QQI, sharing data and avoiding duplication of effort is key to ensuring

effective quality of provision and assurance of funding investment without unduly burdening

providers.

37 QQI: Quality Assurance Guidelines and Criteria for Provider Access to Initial Validation of Programmes Leading to QQI Awards, Further Education and Training http://www.qqi.ie/Downloads/%E2%80%8CInitial%20Validation/IV_QA_Guidelines_Further_Education_2013.pdf

38 Learning and Skills Council (2005), Recognising and Recording Progress and Achievement in Non-accredited Learning.

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Finally, while QQI policy39 states that it will develop new award standards, occupational standards if

they do not exist will have to be developed and submitted to QQI as part of a provider’s submission

for the development of a new award or the review of an existing award by QQI. For example, new

forms of work-based learning including new employer-led apprenticeships are likely to require the

identification and development of new award standards. In this regard, new occupational standards

will need to be identified, developed and submitted to QQI as part of the process of developing a

new award standard. SOLAS is committed to the development of new forms of employer-led work-

based learning and will work with a range of partners under the policy direction of DES to ensure that

this is successful.

Enhancing the quality of FET provision is also a major goal of the five-year FET strategy. The focus on

quality and excellence is also one of SOLAS core principles. Many of the actions contained in this

Corporate Plan are directed towards maintaining a high-quality FET system for learners and

employers, through the identification of learner needs, excellence in programme development, the

reform of guidance systems and the CPD framework for the FET workforce.

SOLAS will work with ETBs, other providers, DES, IDA and EI to develop a strategy for maximising the

role of FET in supporting workplace skill needs. This Workforce Development Strategy will aim to

expand, within existing resources allocated to SOLAS and the ETBs, the provision of FET to employers

and employees in order that the existing workforce has good opportunities to up-skill and that

employers can acquire training that meets their business and human resource development needs.

3.3.3 Promote the value of FET qualifications by ensuring that they enable progression

Some major award holders in FET progress to higher education via the Higher Education Links

Scheme, the pilot scheme for Institutes of Technology and other locally-agreed routes.

SOLAS will have a role alongside QQI, HEA and DES in supporting more effective progression

pathways to Levels 7 and 8. SOLAS intends to build on existing regional clusters of HEIs to support the

development of enhanced partnership agreements between further and higher education providers

to support access and progression, contributing to the HEA target of 10% of higher education

entrants coming from FET by 2016.

In addition to supporting progression, it is also important that FET accreditation has currency with

learners and employers. This was identified as an issue in the five-year FET strategy. SOLAS will

support the work of QQI in ensuring that:

existing and new awards are relevant to current and future skill needs

it is easier for training providers to interpret Common Award specifications

there is clarity about what awards are intended to achieve and

there is an appropriate balance between generic and technical skills within programmes and that

the technical content reflects relevant occupational profiles.

39 'QQI Guidelines and Criteria for Proposing the Development of New Award Standards or Review of Existing Ones'

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3.3.4 Enable learners and employers to directly influence FET provision

There should be opportunities for learners and employers to provide feedback on their experiences,

as well as the opportunity to influence future provision. SOLAS, though our research function, will

gather evidence on employer skill-needs. Employers will be facilitated by ETBs and SOLAS to engage

in a dialogue locally with ETBs and other providers to ensure appropriate provision. SOLAS will

complement this role at national level by working with existing and planned employer engagement

structures40 to identify skills shortages.

In addition, SOLAS intends to explore the use of learner panels and ‘learner voice’ surveys at national

level, to complement local ETB strategies for engaging learners, and to ensure that learner input goes

beyond just providing course feedback to shaping future policy. SOLAS will use these mechanisms to

gather direct feedback from learners especially job seekers, to ensure that FET provision responds to

the current and evolving needs of the labour market.

3.4 Influencing FET Policy and Practice by Generating Intelligence and Supporting Innovation

3.4.1 Undertake and commission targeted strategic research and reviews to support the development of the sector

In the push towards maximising the effectiveness of FET, it is essential that those involved in the

planning and delivery of provision have access to robust evidence. SOLAS will continue to

commission and disseminate high-quality research evidence on priority subjects and skill areas for

current and future provision.

SOLAS will continue to support ETBs and other providers in capturing local labour market and skills

intelligence to inform their own local planning and provision, providing relevant data for ETBs and

others to develop a mix of provision that is in tune with local employer needs and learner demand

and leads to jobs, opportunities for career development and for personal development.

SOLAS will continue to support skill needs studies and research into strategic sectors of the economy

to enable the ETB sector respond appropriately to employer skill needs in these growth areas. In

addition, SOLAS will plan and lead a programme of evaluation to ascertain the effectiveness of all

strands of FET provision to meet its stated objectives on which its funding is based. Arising from

these findings a programme of continuous improvement will be agreed with ETBs to increase both

the effectiveness and efficiency of the provision in question.

3.4.2 Stimulate innovation and entrepreneurship in the sector by proactively seeking out good practice and providing support for the piloting, testing and scaling-up of new ideas that are shown to work

3.4.2a Innovation

The OECD defines four types of innovation: product innovation, process innovation, marketing

innovation and organisational innovation.41 While all four types are important, more generally to

keep FET relevant and efficient, on-going programme innovation is key to meeting the rapidly

changing skill needs of employers. It is therefore important to offer programmes that are relevant,

40 Such as the HE regional clusters, DSP Labour Market Council, the Expert Group on Future Skill Needs, Department of Environment, Community sand Local Government’s social and economic councils, local ETB employer forums etc. 41 OECD (2010), The OECD Innovation Strategy: Getting a Head Start on Tomorrow.

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not only for the current skill needs of learners, but which enable future learning and employment

opportunities to be exploited. As human capital is the essence of innovation, learners need to be

empowered to innovate. Consequently, curricula and pedagogies need to be constantly adapted to

equip students with the capacity to learn and apply new skills throughout their lives.42

This implies a constant flow of new curricula, methodologies and programmes to meet new skill

requirements. It also implies scoping out what currently works best within the sector and

internationally and enabling its review and dissemination, where appropriate, across the ETB sector

more generally. SOLAS or the ETBs or QQI etc. cannot do this on their own. It needs cross

institutional co-operation to ensure that programmes of national strategic importance are developed

rapidly, including standards development, and roll-out within the ETB sector.

In that regard, SOLAS and the ETBs, QQI and HEA will work with employers to ensure that new forms

of employer-led work-based learning appropriate to FET, including apprenticeships and traineeships

and PLC courses are developed speedily and in line with emerging DES policy and that existing

apprenticeships are incorporated into the new apprenticeship infrastructure as appropriate.

At the same time, it requires ETBs to rapidly develop and roll out local programmes to meet local

learner, community and employer skill needs. In this regard the updating of the skill sets of ETB staff

directly engaged in providing and designing FET provision is paramount along with innovation in

organisational, management, design and work practices within the ETB sector. SOLAS will work with

DES, ETBS and others to facilitate this.

Finally, it needs SOLAS, ETBs and other partners such as Aontas, NALA and FESS to collaborate to

identify what currently works best within the sector to generate programme, process and

organisational innovation and to disseminate best practice by, for example, bringing practitioners

together and through fostering contact between national and international experts in different fields.

3.4.2b Entrepreneurship

Entrepreneurship education is more than preparation on how to run a business. Entrepreneurship

refers to an individual’s ability to turn ideas into action.43 The important role of education in

promoting more entrepreneurial attitudes and behaviours is now widely-recognised.44 Research

shows that pupils and students who have participated are three to six times more likely to start a

business at some point in life than those who do not receive entrepreneurship education.45 The

entrepreneurship competence encompasses transversal skills and attitudes as well as more

specialised knowledge and business skills. In a broad sense, entrepreneurship should be considered

as a mind-set that supports everyone in day-to-day life at home and in society, and provides a

foundation for entrepreneurs establishing a social or commercial activity. Entrepreneurship is a key

competence for lifelong learning, as defined in the 2006 European Framework for Key Competences.

SOLAS and the ETBs will continue to play their part in ensuring the relevant training and education

programmes that foster entrepreneurship are available as well as ensuring that the necessary CPD is

42 Ibid.

43 European Commission (2009), Entrepreneurship in Vocational Education and Training

44European Commission, ‘Education & Training for Entrepreneurship’ http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/sme/promoting-entrepreneurship/education-training-entrepreneurship/index_en.htm

45 European Commission (2013), Entrepreneurship Education: A Guide for Educators

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available to ensure that those directly engaged in the delivery and design of FET provision

incorporate leading edge strategies and pedagogies to inculcate an mindset of entrepreneurship.

This will also require collaboration with other relevant bodies (such as Pobal, Skillnets, LEOs etc.) as a

means of co-ordinating provision and furthering the Government’s aim of building entrepreneurial

capability. It is noted that Business Appraisal and Start Your Own Business courses are already part of

the existing ETB provision throughout the country.

3.4.3 Provide a comprehensive view of the effectiveness of current programmes and the potential of new approaches through evaluation

Innovation, programme design, curriculum development and ETB staff development needs, will be

informed by a programme of identification and evaluation led by SOLAS with regard to current and

emerging best practice in adult learning including;

good practice in thematic areas, such as, education and training for entrepreneurship

effective pedagogies for transferring learning to the workplace; and understanding and

preventing early leavers from FET

working with the HEA to conduct a national employer skills survey capturing evidence directly

from employers on their FET skill needs and the effectiveness of FET provision (as well as HET).

This research will be supplemented by a programme of evaluation to assess the effectiveness and

efficiency of key lines of provision, including: PLC provision; Youthreach; and VTOS, Traineeship and

SST, literacy and numeracy, to inform planning and funding considerations.

3.4.4 Ensure the widespread use of FET evidence and promote the benefits of FET

The SOLAS role will be to continually collaborate with key FET partners to promote evidence and best

practice for the FET sector as whole. The focus will be on building on existing SOLAS’ SMLRU research

and labour market publications and establishing the appropriate channels to share best practice with

as wide an audience as possible in order to facilitate continuous improvement

SOLAS will continue to share its research and evaluation outputs at national level with key partners,

such as the public employment service (Intreo/Jobpath), DJEI , IDA and EI and the higher education

sector (e.g. HEA and IOTI). By putting FET effectiveness in the context of the overall activation, jobs

and education and training landscape, SOLAS will be better placed to lever the evidence generated to

ensure that new policies are implemented through co-ordinated approaches.

SOLAS will oversee a programme of independent research to identify the local, regional and national

economic and social benefits of FET provision in each ETB area, and pro-actively raise awareness of

these benefits to improve the standing and appreciation of FET. These impact studies and the

benefits identified for the individuals and the economy at local and national level will assist all FET

partners with promoting wider understanding of what the FET sector does and the opportunities

available for learners, communities and employers.

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3.5 Building Sector Capacity and Responsiveness

3.5.1 Ensure the smooth and effective transition to the new ETB-led FET delivery model so that learners experience continuity of service

It is essential that during the transition period whereby all of the former FÁS training centre network,

associated staff and provision are incorporated into the newly established ETB network, existing

programmes are maintained and that provision for learners is not disrupted. SOLAS will fully

discharge its commitments made to ETBs with regard to supports that it will provide to ensure a

smooth transition is completed e.g. maintaining administrative support services (finance and

payments; HR; ICT) during the transition. SOLAS will also continue to provide support for contracted

provision, maintaining the list of pre-qualified providers, provide guidance on the procurement and

management of contracted provision and provide support and guidance for those ETBs with no

mainstream (former FÁS) Training Centre in their region. SOLAS will also continue to manage both

the Momentum programme on behalf of DES and e-College on-line provision.

3.5.2 Ensure that the ETB FET workforce has the necessary skills and knowledge to respond to the priorities set out in the FET strategy

The future success of the FET sector depends to a large extent on the expertise and enthusiasm of

thousands of professionals working in and managing and supporting FET provision nationally and

locally. SOLAS will systematically collect data on the current qualifications and skills profile of the ETB

workforce. This will facilitate a review of CPD needs in the context of currently-available provision.

In collaboration with ETBs, staff and staff representatives, DES and other FET partners and in line

with the five-year FET strategy, SOLAS, in collaboration with FESS, will support the ETBs to develop,

negotiate and establish a professional and competency skills roadmap for those entering into and

currently engaged in the FET sector in its broadest sense, rather than just relying on the mandatory

qualification framework for teaching staff engaged in FET as introduced by the Teaching Council.

This will be complemented by work to ensure the provision of world-class standards of learning

through on-going provision of staff development programmes as well as internal and external

assessment of provision informed by robust good practice benchmarks and by QQI

evaluations/monitoring reports.

3.5.3 Provide sector advocacy to ensure a joined-up approach to designing and implementing skills policy

SOLAS will seek co-ordinated, joined-up approaches across Government where this will enable

increased FET effectiveness. Complementing the advocacy role of ETBs and other FET partners such

as Aontas and NALA, SOLAS will also advocate for the sector, for example by:

identifying the most effective operational models to ensure ETBs contribution to the Department

of Social Protection’s activation policy

advocating for a dedicated FET Capital Fund to underpin high-quality provision through

investment in new equipment, technology and premises and maintaining existing

facilities/estates in a condition of good repair

mobilising support for the development of appropriate accreditation/occupational standards by

QQI.

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3.6 Building SOLAS Capability and Organisational Effectiveness

3.6.1 Install an effective SOLAS structure

As part of the transition programme for FET in Ireland, there is a need for SOLAS, as a new organisation, to ensure that it is effectively constituted to deliver

the goals contained in this Corporate Plan and its commitments in the FET Strategy. The new SOLAS organisational structure is based around three divisions

with clear lines of accountability for the range of functions that SOLAS will carryout;

FET Strategic Services

This Division will;

provide the internal hub for developing

the FET Strategy, the SOLAS

Corporate Plan, sector knowledge,

labour market intelligence and the

evidence-base of on-going research

and evaluation.

lead on continuous improvement with

regard to all FET provision as well as

operational planning and in particular

the development of the Annual

Integrated FET Services Plan,

stakeholder engagement with the

ETBs and others, providing an expert

and customer-centred approach to

managing relationships with key

partners of SOLAS.

co-ordinate the implementation of the

FET Strategy, the SOLAS Corporate

Plan and the Literacy and Numeracy

Strategy.

Central Programmes and FET Support Services

This Division will;

support capacity building in the FET sector,

including the expansion of apprenticeships and

traineeships and other forms of work-based

learning, enabling innovative new national

programmes to complement local provision by

ETBs.

co-ordinate the development and

implementation of a FET strategy for people at

work

continue to manage Momentum on behalf of

DES and e-College courses.

continue to support and maintain the

Contracted Training System and manage the

Contract Training Tender List and maintain a

contracted training web based portal for ETBs.

maintain relevant transition supports for ETBs

subject to resources e.g. apprenticeship, quality

assurance.

following a review of CSCS, QSCS and

Safepass in 2012 concluding that the delivery

of SafePass, CSCS and QSCS does not fit with

the strategic remit of SOLAS, options with

regard to the transfer of these programmes to a

more appropriate host organisation will be

examined.

Resources

This Division will;

support the FET Strategic Services Division on

performance management of the disbursement of

public funding.

continue to provide a financial accounting,

management accounting and staff payroll service

and, subject to additional resources being

allocated to SOLAS, provide SAP support for

ETBs and a co-ordinating role with regard to ESF

and EGF.

transfer of all relevant administration functions and

systems currently being provided by the Finance

Unit, to the ETBs.

develop ICT platforms to support information for

learners, employers and providers and external

funders of SOLAS and the operational functions of

SOLAS and the sector including a National

Course Database, a National Course Calendar

and a National Learner Database.

continue to provide a range of IT related platforms

for ETBs and DSP, as per agreed timelines.

provide a range of corporate support services e.g.

Corporate Governance/Audit, HR, Staff Relations,

Legal Services, Risk Management to ensure

SOLAS capability to discharge its mandate under

the Further Education and Training Act 2013.

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3.6.2 Improve SOLAS capability

SOLAS will be an outward-looking agency and success will depend on being able to work in tandem with a

diverse range of SOLAS stakeholders. The SOLAS team will need to have the skills to tread the line between

ensuring consistency and standards in FET provision, while allowing those at the forefront of FET provision

to make choices about what works best for their learners, employers and communities. Having effective

relationships with a wide range of FET stakeholders is central to this ambition.

A programme of investment in the right skills, knowledge and working practices will ensure that SOLAS has

the right type and level of expertise across the organisation to deliver its mandate. This will be facilitated

by an internal skills audit and by building on the recently launched ‘change management’ programme for all

staff. The goals and values of the new organisation will be incorporated into job descriptions so that all staff

can understand their contribution to meeting the mission and vision of the organisation. Through PMDS,

staff will be able to assess their contribution to the progress of the high level goals and agree corrective

action, if appropriate.

The merging of the former VEC and the FÁS training centre network was also a merger of two different

cultures. A successful merging of cultures requires patience and leadership from the top and support from

key partners. SOLAS as a key partner has been providing technical support for ETBs. However, SOLAS

recognises that there are gaps in its understanding and knowledge of the FE part of the FET sector, the ETBs

and how they work including ETB work culture and ethos. SOLAS will need to develop strategies to increase

its own capability in the domains of FE more generally and ETBs more specifically. SOLAS will seek to

develop a secondment and exchange programme with other parts of the FET sector to support the

development of a range of technical and personal expertise, creating permeable boundaries between

SOLAS and the ETB sector at large.

3.6.3 Develop a Communications and Branding Strategy

3.6.3a Communications

All organizations, of all sizes and operating in different sectors and societies, must, if they are to be

effective and succeed, find ways to establish and nurture relationships with their stakeholders, upon which

they are dependent. A communication strategy should be linked to the way in which an organisation plans

its business activities in three time ‘horizons’: what they need to do now, in the mid-term, and in the long-

term.46

Reporting directly into the office of the Chief Executive, the SOLAS Communications Unit will be responsible

for developing effective communications with key SOLAS partners combined with effective joined-up

internal stakeholder management, so that our partners perceive and receive value from engaging with

SOLAS and that engagement is efficient and knowledgeable.

The SOLAS Communications Unit will also be responsible for leading the development of a communications

strategy to promote FET and to celebrate its successes. In parallel, the Unit will also lead the development

of a SOLAS communications strategy, which will include exploring the feasibility of setting-up a web-based

platform for ETBs and providers as a resource for clear, useful information about SOLAS operations and a

website for employers and learners setting out what is on offer across the ETB and the FET landscape more

generally and, where appropriate, signposting to further information and links. As part of this website, a

function to enable learners to provide feedback on their experiences of FET will be investigated.

46 Mahony, J. (2012), Strategic Communication, Principles and Practice, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK

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3.6.3b Corporate Branding

The SOLAS ‘brand’ will be developed primarily through the reputation it develops as a trusted leader and

guardian of FET with its stakeholders. This reputation will be developed through the work of SOLAS which

will be delivered professionally in a consistent fashion in accordance with its values and guiding principles.

The ‘brand’ as such will not be akin to a “high street” brand in that learners will not be attending SOLAS-

delivered courses or acquiring SOLAS qualifications, as SOLAS is not a provider of courses or an awarding

body. A strong reputation for excellence, clear direction which is evidence-based and an open collaborative

way of engaging with stakeholders will be a paramount to developing a strong SOLAS’ brand’.

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3.7 What will success look like for SOLAS?

3.7.1 Measuring success

Due to the lack of robust baseline data on current FET inputs, outputs and outcomes, SOLAS is at this time,

not in a position to identify feasible benchmarks and targets to measure progress in implementing the

Corporate Plan. This evidence base will emerge over time. The data contained in the first ever integrated

FET Services Plan is a good starting point.

However, much more work needs to be accomplished in this area. In addition, SOLAS itself is developing its

own structures to deliver its mandate and make it fit for purpose. This also will take time to bed in.

Nevertheless, at this stage, it is possible to identify areas to be considered as possible high-level indicators

for each of the SOLAS Goals with a view to connecting the corporate plan to the positive impacts that

SOLAS is aiming to achieve over the next three years.

Table 3: Possible Measures and Indicators for each of the high level SOLAS Goals

Measures Indicators

Goal 1: Enabling delivery of skills for the economy

Positive outcomes from FET learning

A higher proportion of those who engage in FET, including those with

barriers to participation such as persons with a disability, as well as

existing and future priority cohorts identified by DES in conjunction

with DSP, stay engaged, complete qualifications, transition successfully

into employment or where appropriate, move into higher level

qualifications in FET or HET.

Skills progression A higher proportion of FET learners (i.e. more than 24%) are achieving a major award across levels 1-6 and particularly at Levels 1-3 so that the NSS targets for FET are being progressed more rapidly.

Value for money Reduced costs per positive outcome achieved over time.

Goal 2: Supporting active inclusion

Removing barriers to participation

The nature of the barriers which cause learning breakdown and lead to exclusion are understood.

Mechanisms which need to be developed are identified and implemented which will enable diversity to be accommodated in an integrated system of FET such as innovative practices for recognising and accommodating diversity; activities that advocate against discrimination and challenge attitudes; training programmes which equip FET staff to deal with diverse needs.

Engagement with literacy and numeracy provision

The Literacy and Numeracy Strategy as set out in the FET Strategy is being implemented.

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Goal 3: Empowering learners and employers

Quality standards All funded organisations sign-up to and implement agreed standards for learner service (the Learner Charter).

Flexibility Increased availability of flexible course provision.

Learner satisfaction

Increase in the proportion of FET learners that are satisfied with the quality of learning.

Employer engagement

Large employers and SMEs are increasingly taking up FET and increasingly engaged in workforce development.

Employer satisfaction

Increase in the proportion of FET employers that are satisfied with the quality of learning.

Goal 4: Influencing FET policy and practice by generating intelligence and supporting innovation and entrepreneurship

Influence SOLAS is recognised as a leading source of high-quality, relevant labour market information and labour market /skill needs intelligence and FET research.

Innovation Increased number of new courses successfully developed and implemented at national and local level.

Entrepreneurship Entrepreneurship introduced as an explicit objective within the curriculum, steering documents (e.g. curricula and syllabi) and guidelines developed/updated, and the scope and effect of entrepreneurship education in SOLAS funded FET is measured

Goal 5: Building sector capacity and responsiveness

Stakeholder added value

The majority of ETBs and other funded providers report that SOLAS adds value in supporting delivery.

FET workforce By 2016, over 75% of the ETB workforce is actively engaged in continuing professional development.

Goal 6: Building SOLAS capability and organisational effectiveness and Brand

Stakeholder satisfaction

An increasing proportion of SOLAS stakeholders at national and regional level report the organisation to be professional and responsive and effective.

Branding Brand impact is positive and increasing over the timeframe of the Corporate Plan

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Part 4

Overarching Implementation Plan

4.1 Implementation

4.1.1 Context and Purpose

The following proposed Overarching Implementation Plan sets out the High Level Goals, their associated

objectives and the actions to progress each objective. The linkages between activities are highlighted. A

more detailed Operational Plan will be developed when the organisation is fully structured and will set out

specific tasks, performance indicators, ownership and timelines to drive the implementation of the

Corporate Plan as well as to assist with planning and monitoring progress in that regard.

When reading the Overarching Implementation Plan it is worth remembering that almost all of the strategic

objectives and related actions are inter-connected and inter-dependant. For example, enabling delivery of

skills for the economy is either explicit or implicit in the majority of the strategic objectives and many of the

associated actions. The same holds for active inclusion and meeting learner needs. With regard to planning,

SOLAS will participate and contribute to the determination of national skills priorities in consultation with

‘Intreo’, HEA, the Expert Group on Future Skill Needs and other departments/agencies. Both SOLAS and

ETBs will contribute to local skills advisory and economic development networks and connect with local HEI

planning structures. SOLAS and ETBs will be lead partners in this regard.

4.1.2 Implementation timelines

Implementation of the Corporate Plan is based around three phases of action:

o 2014 - Building the Foundations: Managing the transition to the new integrated FET system and

detailing the plans for the next steps in the transformation of FET.

o 2015 - Pathways to Progress: Development and piloting of major operational changes and early

delivery on critical issues.

o 2016 - Delivery, Reflection and Continuous Improvement: To have in place a fully-functional and

operational organisation, working with and for the FET sector.

4.1.3 Implementing the SOLAS Corporate Plan – Examples of Challenges

Some of the main challenges associated with implementing the Corporate Plan are:

o Deploying existing SOLAS resources to ensure business continuity and progressing Government

priorities with regard to education policy, ‘Pathways to Work’ and ‘Action Plan for Jobs’ initiatives.

o Additional resources may be required to discharge additional functions to those outlined in the

SOLAS Implementation Plan such as managing the European Globalisation Fund and expanding

and developing the number of new apprenticeships and transferring existing apprenticeships to

the new system.

o Loss of key corporate skills and knowledge through early retirement.

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It is worth noting that the success of the Corporate Plan is contingent on policy support and resources.

4.1.4 Implementation oversight

On-going management of the implementation process will be overseen by the SOLAS Board.

4.1.5 Implementation Monitoring

Overall monitoring of the implementation of the Corporate Plan will be the responsibility of the SOLAS

Board. The SOLAS Executive will be tasked with following up on individual activities that support the

delivery of the Goals and objectives, providing regular progress reports on Corporate Plan Implementation

for consideration by the SOLAS Board. SOLAS will undertake this task in collaboration with its main

partners. These are DES, ETBI, ETBs and other Government Departments such as DSP and DJEI and Bodies

such as QQI, as well as employers and learners and organisations involved in FET, such as NALA and

AONTAS.

4.1.6 Targets

DES sets FET policy and provides direction on a range of targets for FET provision including Government

targets relating to the ‘Pathways to Work’ Initiative and the Action Plan for Jobs initiatives. The Annual FET

Service Plan as well as the individual Annual ETB Service Plans will reflect DES agreed targets around

provision. Overarching responsibility for standards and awards development and overall monitoring of

quality assurance provision is primarily the responsibility of QQI.

4.1.7 Implementation Costs

The overall delivery of the SOLAS Corporate Plan will be predicated on introducing a number of initiatives,

including for example: a ‘fit for purpose’ FET data infrastructure; responsibilities around management of

the ESF in Ireland; leading the introduction of the new apprenticeship system; and, developing new

apprenticeships.

Recurrent annual funding for publicly-funded FET is currently running at around €800m+. This would need

to be maintained just to provide current nominal levels of resourcing per learner.47 The SOLAS Corporate

Plan is striving to achieve better outcomes from participation in FET (and in the labour market) across a

diverse range of individuals, including those experiencing barriers, such as persons with a disability, early

school-leavers and long term unemployed persons. The cost of effective education and training

programmes to address the needs of these individuals, for example, specialist training provision for persons

with a disability and community training workshops for early school leavers, tends to be higher than

‘standard’ programmes.

Any serious reform programme will require additional investment. The current economic climate poses

challenges for SOLAS to ensure that its Corporate Plan is effective in progressing the FET Strategy. However

it is worth keeping in mind that the timeframe for the FET Strategy is five years and the situation may

improve in the meantime. Notwithstanding this, there are some key actions where additional resources

(with cost implications) may be required and these are listed in Table 4 below.

47 Not taking into account inflation adjustments

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Table 4 - Key actions where additional funding may be required

Item

Data Infrastructure – roll out and implementation

Management of ESF

CPD

Enhanced research and support for programme reviews and identification and roll-out of FET

best practice across the sector

Funding of new apprenticeships and other forms of work-based learning

Capital Development

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4.2 Overarching Implementation Plan

Action Linked to Action Items

Goal 1: Enabling delivery of skills for the economy

Put in place a new framework of outcomes relevant to the breadth of FET programmes including completion, progression, employment, and certification. (Strategic Objective 1)

1.1.1 Develop an outcomes based framework for the FET sector

Linked to Action Items 3.3.1, 3.4.2, 4.3.1, 4.4.2

1.1.2 Implement and support the operation of an outcomes based framework

Linked to Action Item 1.4.3, 1.3.3

1.1.3 Outcomes framework fully operational

Develop a new funding model that ensures resources are most-effectively targeted according to learner/employer skills needs and ‘what works’ in terms of effective provision (Strategic Objective 2)

1.2.1 Set parameters for funding allocation

Linked to Action Item 2.1.1

1.2.2 Develop new funding allocation model

1.2.3 Establish funding priorities

Linked to Action Item 1.4.1

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Action Linked to Action Items

1.2.4 Pilot new funding model

Put in place a new data infrastructure to inform decision-making and assist ETBs and other providers in the consistent capturing of outcomes data, feedback and analysis (Strategic Objective 3)

1.3.1 Establish a National Course Database for FET

1.3.2 Establish and publish a National Course Calendar for FET

1.3.3 Develop and operate a National Learner Database to provide real time information

Linked to Action Item 1.1.2

Implement a new integrated Planning process ( Strategic Objective 4)

1.4.1 Identify priority cohorts for FET funding

Linked to Action Items 1.2.1, 1.2.2 1.2.3

1.4.2 Apply labour market intelligence to inform planning of course provision

Linked to Action Items 4.1.1, 4.1.2, 4.1.3

1.4.3 Collaborate with ETBs in devising annual plans

Linked to Action Items 1.1.2, 1.1.3, 1.3.1, 1.3.2

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2: Supporting active inclusion

Ensure effective targeting of provision and outcomes for priority groups (Strategic Objective 1)

2.1.1 Ensure that FET serves the needs of priority groups identified by DSP

Linked to Action Item 1.4.1

2.1.2 Support the provision of education and training for inclusion

Identify and address Barriers to Participation in FET ( Strategic Objective 2)

2.2.1 Promote equal access to FET in order to engage with groups who are distant from the labour market

Linked to Action Item 2.1.2

Support new forms of delivery and awareness-raising activity to increase engagement with literacy provision (Strategic objective 3)

2.3.1 Host a committee to develop a Literacy awareness campaign

2. 3.2 Ensure the implementation of a literacy and numeracy strategy for the sector

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Embed basic skills provision within mainstream FET provision (Strategic Objective 4)

2. 4.1 Commission research on integration of literacy and numeracy into FET programmes

Linked to Action Item 2.3.1

2.4.2 Pilot test integration based on research outcomes

Increase the opportunities for learners to achieve accreditation in order to support progression ( Strategic Objective 5)

2.4.3 Review un-accredited provision with a view to increasing volume of accredited programmes

Linked to Action Item 3.3.2

3: Empowering learners and employers

Ensure transparency about FET provision, providing learners and employers with the necessary information about learning opportunities to make informed choices (Strategic Objective 1)

3.1.1 Establish and publish a National Course Calendar for FET

3.1.2 Provide Information for learners to facilitate informed decision making

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3.1.3 Engage with the National Centre for Guidance in Education in relation to development of an Integrated Guidance Strategy

Enable flexible, high-quality FET provision in line with learner and employer expectations (Strategic Objective 2)

3.2.1 Co-ordinate the development of a Learner charter

Linked to Action Item 3.4.1

3.2.2 Co-ordinate the Development and implementation of an FET Strategy for people at work

Promote the value of FET qualifications by ensuring that they enable progression (Strategic Objective 3)

3.3.1 Map FET progression pathways to higher education in collaboration with QQI, DES and HEA

3.3.2 Promote currency and benefits of FET accreditation among employers and learners

3.3.3 Support QQI in the review of award specifications

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Enable learners and employers to directly influence FET provision (Strategic Objective 4)

3.4.1 Establish learner advisory groups

3.4.2 Conduct learner and employer satisfaction research

Linked to Action Item 3.2.1

3.4.3 Build on existing structures for engagement with employers

Linked to Action Item 4.1.1, 4.1.3

4: Influencing FET policy and practice by generating intelligence and supporting innovation and entrepreneurship

Undertake and commission targeted strategic research and reviews to support the development of the sector (Strategic Objective 1)

4.1.1 Conduct research on current and emerging skill needs of the economy

Linked to Action Items 1.4.1, 1.4.2,

4.1.2 Disseminate research findings on skill needs of the labour market

Linked to Action Items 1.4.2, 1.4.3

4.1.3 Commission National Employer Skills Surveys

Linked to Action Item 1.4.2

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4.1.4 Deliver major parts of the EGFSN Annual Work Programme

4.1.5 Contribute to the review of existing Apprenticeships

4.1.6 Support the development of ETB capacity to deliver high quality apprenticeships

Linked to Action Item 6.3.2

Stimulate innovation and entrepreneurship in the sector by proactively seeking out good practice and providing support for the piloting, testing and scaling-up new ideas that are shown to work (Strategic Objective 2)

4.2.1 Implement best practice exchange within the sector

Linked to Action Item 6.3.2

4.2.2 Support innovation and knowledge transfer within the sector

Linked to Action Item 6.3.2

4.2.3 Support innovation in new programme development based on the needs of the economy

Linked to Action Item 4.1.1, 4.1.2, 4.1.3, 4.1.4

4.2.4 Contribute to the design of new Apprenticeships

Linked to Action Item 4.1.3

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4.2.5 Facilitate the development of other forms of employer led work based programmes including traineeships and PLC courses

Linked to Action item 4.1.3

4.2.6 Introduce entrepreneurship as an explicit goal within the curriculum, develop/update steering documents (e.g. curricula and syllabi) and guidelines, and measure both the scope and effect of entrepreneurship education and training in SOLAS funded FET

Provide a comprehensive view of the effectiveness of current programmes and the potential of new approaches through evaluation (Strategic Objective 3)

4.3.1 Plan annual programme evaluations to assess effectiveness of key lines of provision, e.g. PLC etc.

4.3.2 Identify and promote best practice in adult learning among FET providers

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Ensure widespread use of FET intelligence and promote understanding of the sector (Strategic Objective 4)

4.4.1 Communicate outcomes of labour market research, evaluation reports and SMLRU research to key partners

Linked to Action Item 6.3.1

4.4.2 Commission impact studies on the benefits of FET at local, regional and national level

Linked to Action Item 6.3.1

4.4.3 Raise awareness of the benefits of FET

Linked to Action Item 6.3.1

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5: Building sector capacity and responsiveness

Ensure smooth and effective transition to the new ETB-led FET delivery model so that learners experience continuity of service and that, over time, ETBs and other providers have the capacity to meet their objectives (Strategic Objective 1)

5.1.1 Manage the transition and transfer of former FAS Training Centres to the ETBs

5.1.2 Provide support for contracted provision to ETBs as appropriate

Ensure that the FET workforce has the necessary skills and knowledge to respond to the priorities set out in the FET strategy (Strategic Objective 2)

5.2.1 Support the development of a framework to underpin CPD for the ETB sector to include those entering the sector and those currently engaged

5.2.2 Provide funding and support for CPD in the FET sector

5.2.3 Commission a skills audit of the ETB workforce

5.2.4 Review CPD needs for ETBs

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Provide sector advocacy to ensure a joined-up approach on designing and implementing skills policy (Strategic Objective 3)

5.3.1 Develop operational models to ensure ETBs contribution to DSP Activation Policy

Linked to Action Items 2.1.1

5.3.2 Seek the establishment of a FET capital fund

5.3.3 Support the development of occupational profiles to facilitate award development and accreditation

6: Building SOLAS capability and organisational effectiveness

Install an effective SOLAS Structure (Strategic Objective 1)

6.1.1 Devise SOLAS organisational structure based on three divisions; FET Strategic Services, Central Programmes and FET Support Services and SOLAS Resources Division

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6.1.2 Build on the strategic capability of eCollege and Momentum and Contracted Training to ensure responsive, flexible and innovative FET provision

6.1.3 Subject to appropriate options being identified, arrange for the transfer of CSCS, QSCS and Safepass to an appropriate host organisations

6.1.4 Maintain transition supports for ETBs as appropriate subject to resources e.g . QA, Apprenticeship

6.1.5 Maintain, subject to resources SAP transition support for ETBs and co-ordination related to ESF and EGF

6.1.6 Continue to provide support services in IT, finance and payroll to ensure SOLAS capacity to discharge its mandate

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Improve SOLAS capability (Strategic Objective 2)

6.2.1 Conduct an internal skills audit

6.2.2 Implement a HR development programme

6.2.3 Implement a secondment and exchange programme with other parts of the FET Sector

Develop a Communications Strategy (Strategic Objective 3)

6.3.1 Develop a communications and branding strategy and conduct periodic service and brand quality surveys to measure brand impact

6.3.2 Develop an effective relationship management system for SOLAS partners and internal stakeholder management

Linked to Action Item 4.2.1, 4.2.2

6.3.3 Externally benchmark SOLAS on a periodic basis to compare and measure against other comparable organisations outside Ireland

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Appendix 1: Government Reforms (Overview) Higher Education Reform

In May 2013, the Minister for Education and Skills announced a major re-organisation of the

country’s higher education sector. This announcement followed recommendations made by the

Higher Education Authority (HEA) on system reconfiguration, inter-institutional collaboration and

system governance in Irish higher education. A new system performance framework is also being put

in place by the HEA based on key system objectives and indicators noted by Government. A key

element in the overall approach will be the implementation of performance funding in the sector.

One of the key objectives in the Higher Education System Performance Framework is to promote

access for disadvantages groups and to put in place coherent pathways from second level education,

from further education and other non-traditional entry routes. Integrated strategic planning between

FET and HET will play an important role in achieving this objective. In January 2014, the Minister for

Education and Skills announced the publication of the Heads of a Bill which will allow for the future

establishment of Technological Universities and the mergers of institutes of technology.

Development and launch of ‘Intreo’, Department of Social Protection

‘Intreo’ is a service provided by DSP and provides a single point of contact for all employment and

income supports. Designed to provide a more streamlined approach, ‘Intreo’ offers tailored

employment services and supports for jobseekers and employers alike. The new ‘Intreo’ service is a

key part of the ‘Pathways to Work’ initiative and is focussed on supporting those who are

unemployed, or become unemployed, to stay connected to the workforce and to find employment.

The intention at the core of ‘Pathways to Work’ is that no-one who loses their job should be allowed

to drift without support into long-term unemployment. The further education and training sector

continues to play a key part in ensuring that ‘Pathways to Work’ initiative is an effective response to

the jobs crisis.

Jobpath48

JobPath is a new programme of employment activation aimed specifically at the long-term

unemployed (over 12 months) as well as those most distant from the labour market. It will be

delivered by third party providers of employment services under contract to the Department and will

supplement and complement existing ‘Intreo’, Local Employment Service (LES) and Job Clubs

capacity.

48 DSP Presentation “Jobpath”, Proposed contracting of third party providers of employment services, Information Session, Friday, 26th July 2013, Chartered Accountants House, Dublin.

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The National Youth Guarantee Implementation Plan49

The Irish ‘Youth Guarantee’ Implementation Plan was launched in January 2014. The implementation

of the Guarantee is being led by the Department of Social Protection and involves actions relevant

for FET, including the delivery of opportunities to young people through relevant and meaningful

education and training programmes. The FET sector has a major role to play as a key partner in

assisting DSP to deliver the ‘Youth Guarantee’ and is ready to build on its current achievements in

addressing the education and training needs of young people. In considering the allocation of FET

places under the ‘Youth Guarantee’ and ‘Pathways to Work’, the existing level of places for PLC

courses may also need to be taken into account.

‘Action Plan for Jobs’ 2014

The ‘Action Plan for Jobs’ is a key component of the Government’s response to the unemployment

crisis. It involves all Government Departments and 46 Agencies. The ‘Action Plan for Jobs’ is

complemented by other Government Initiatives including ‘Pathways to Work’ and the Medium Term

Economic Strategy. The aim of the ‘Action Plan for Jobs’ is to have 100,000 more people in work by

2016 as a key platform to enable Government policy objectives of increasing employment and

reducing unemployment while also increasing competitiveness and productivity in the Irish

economy. The Action Plan for Jobs focusses on creating an environment conducive to job creation

and innovation; helping the unemployed back to work; meeting the skills needs of the economy; and

increasing competition through better regulation. FET has a key role to play in collaboration with

other government departments and agencies in supporting the aims of the Action Plan and in

particular to assist unemployed back to work and to meet the FET skill needs of the economy.

Establishment of the Quality and Qualifications Ireland QQI

On the 6th November 2012, Quality and Qualifications Ireland (QQI) was established as a new

integrated agency.50 QQI is responsible for the external quality assurance of further and higher

education and training (including English language provision). In addition to acting as an awarding

body, it is also responsible for the quality assurance oversight of providers across further and higher

education and training and for promoting and facilitating activities that lead to quality enhancement.

In addition, it has legislative responsibilities around data and international education. QQI is also

responsible for the development of the National Framework of Qualifications (NFQ). The FET sector is

49 ‘Pathways to Work': The implementation of the EU Council Recommendation for a Youth Guarantee, Ireland. 50 Replacing the Further Education and Training Awards Council, the Higher Education and Training Awards Council and the National Qualifications Authority of Ireland and incorporating the functions of the Irish Universities Quality Board.

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a key provider of QQI accredited programmes at levels 1-6 on the NFQ. See

http://www.qqi.ie/About/Pages/Strategy-Statement.aspx.

Apprenticeship Review

A recent review of the apprenticeship system published in January 2014 concluded that there is

significant scope to expand employer-led apprenticeships at FET level (and also in higher education)

into a wide range of occupations in business sectors such as ICT, retail, hospitality, business

administration, medical devices, sport and leisure, childcare and social care, financial services,

accounting, hairdressing and beauty care.

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Appendix 2: Employment Projections 2012-202051

Publicly-funded education and training systems tend to expand in economic ‘good times’ and to

contract in recessions. However educational needs travel in the opposite direction; they tend to

expand during recessions.52 The recent recession has seen an increased appetite for more people

wanting to invest more in education and training, stay longer in schools and postpone their entry into

the labour market, while at the same time governments also promote education and training, inter

alia, as a strategy to help people out of unemployment.

The need for increased engagement in FET (and HET) is also being driven by the conclusion that

skilled employment will keep growing up to 2020. Furthermore, a number of policy measures are

successfully activating older workers (55 and 64 years) to increase their employment rate into the

future.53 An increasing number of individuals can therefore be expected to ‘dip into’ education and

training more frequently, to learn new skills or refresh or upgrade their skillset so that they can

access employment, sustain their employability, or change career direction, become more productive

or to insulate themselves against unemployment.54

Employment projections imply certain skills requirements and associated education and training

provision linked to these occupations. While skills have become the global currency of 21st-century

economies, they can depreciate as the requirements of labour markets evolve. Securing the best

returns on investment in skills requires the ability to assess the quality and quantity of the skills

available in the population, determine and anticipate the skills required in the labour market, and

develop and use those skills effectively in better jobs that lead to better lives.55

The fact that skills shortages can co-exist with high unemployment, and that there is persistent

evidence of mismatch between employees’ skills and job requirements, indicates that a population’s

skills base (and workforce) and the investment made to develop those skills may be partly going to

waste. Building effective systems of labour market/skill intelligence, planning and funding can

mitigate this problem.

In the early 1990s, the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), through collaboration with FÁS,

developed an occupational employment forecasting model.56 Following the dissolution of FÁS, SOLAS

has been responsible for the maintenance and the updating of the model and the production of the

employment projections at occupational level. Through this model SOLAS is in a position to provide

an indication of how the growth paths outlined in the ESRI Medium Term Review (MTR) 2020 are

likely to impact on employment at occupational level over the period 2012-2020.

51 The SOLAS Skills and Labour Market Research Unit, (2014) ‘Employment Projections 2012-2020’. 52 OECD, (2013) Global perspectives on education and skills. 53 To a target of 50%. 54 EU (2013) Growth potential of EU human resources and policy implications for future economic growth Working Paper 3/2013. 55 OECD Skills Strategy; Developing the right skills and turning them into better jobs and better lives. 56 Between 1991 and 2007, a series of FÁS/ESRI Manpower Forecasting Studies were published using this modelling framework. In 2009, the model was transferred from the ESRI to the Skills and Labour Market Unit (SLMRU) which was then based in FÁS. Some indication on how the projected occupational employment may impact on the educational composition of the workforce by 2020 can also be provided. The model is based on the shift-share methodology developed by the University of Warwick and represents an extension to the ESRI HERMES macroeconomic model of the Irish economy.

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It is important to keep in mind that projections generated using the model are not predictions of

what will happen, but rather an illustration of possible outcomes, particularly in terms of the

direction of change. Three scenarios were developed for modelling purposes.57

The scenarios are based on assumptions regarding the performance of the Irish economy over the

projection period 2012-2020, including the global economy and EU growth path, domestic policies,

fiscal responses, etc. In addition, it is also assumed that the shifts in sub-sectoral, occupational and

educational profile of employment within sectors observed over the period quarter 1, 2007 and

quarter 1, 2013, will continue over the projection period 2012-2020. Occupation projections are

extended to provide some indication on how the projected occupational employment may impact on

the educational composition of the workforce by 2020.

Irrespective of scenario, employment in all occupations is expected to increase in the period 2012-

2020. In the broadest sense, overall employment will increase by less than 100,000 in the weak

growth scenario (‘zombie EU’), by approximately 160,000 in the ‘modest’ growth scenario

(constrained credit) and by approximately 270,000 in the ‘strong’ growth scenario (recovery). See

Figure 1 overleaf.

Figure 1: Employment forecasts in the different growth scenarios

57 Developed by the ESRI: the ‘recovery’ scenario (in the Strategy referred to as ‘strong’ growth: the EU economy grows, facilitating growth in the Irish economy, and the domestic policies succeed in restoring the banking system; The ‘delayed adjustment’ scenario (in Strategy referred to as ‘modest’ recovery); the EU economy grows, however, there is a failure (due to domestic policy or other reasons) in resolving the remaining issues with the Irish banking sector, resulting in restricted credit supply to the enterprise sector and households; The ‘stagnation’ scenario (referred in the Strategy as the ‘weak’ growth), the EU economy stagnates (due to deflationary fiscal policy, collapse of the euro and/or a lower productivity growth than anticipated), preventing growth in the Irish economy.

2.02

1.81

1.90

1.60

1.65

1.70

1.75

1.80

1.85

1.90

1.95

2.00

2.05

2011 2013 2015 2017 2019

Employment (m)

Recovery Zombie EU Constrained credit

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Source: SOLAS SMLRU

Employers’ skill needs most relevant to the FET sector relating to the anticipated employment

projections have been identified in a series of Forfás/EGFSN reports.58 An expanding range of FET

related skill needs are emerging such as the ‘greening’ of operative, skilled workers and skilled trades

in construction;59 4,500 immediate vacancies at levels NFQ 5/6 in ICT companies in Ireland;60 heritage

and conservation skills;61 special skills relating to industrial heritage;62 growth potential of over 3,000

full time equivalent jobs by 2020 in the sea fisheries and aquaculture (farm fish and shell fish)

industries;63 Tourism/Hospitality sector culinary, operative, administrative and marketing skills.64

IDA and EI have a clear understanding of the skill needs (both FET and HET) required to attract and

sustain the companies supported by them. These companies have specific skill needs and tend to be

located across the country. The ETBs have a presence in every county in Ireland and have a

comparative advantage in that regard over other providers. It is essential that the relevant FET skill

needs of IDA and EI supported companies (existing and new) are identified to the relevant ETB and

DSP and addressed by them locally in the most appropriate and timely manner.

The Educational Distribution of Employment Forecast 202065

The number of people employed in the economy with a higher education qualification has risen since

the recession struck. Employment levels for those without a Leaving Certificate are down by over

40% and, for those with a Leaving Certificate but without a FET or HE qualification, is also down by

about 25%. The educational distribution of occupational employment is projected to improve

further. The share of higher education graduates will increase in all occupations. The share of FET

qualifications holders will increase in all occupations except professional, associate professional and

administrative. The share of persons with less than higher secondary education will decline in all

occupations. In relative terms, the strongest employment growth is projected for both HET and FET

qualifications holders, while the employment growth for the higher secondary and below higher

secondary education categories is projected to be below the average employment growth.

58 For example, ‘Guidelines for VECs in aligning further education provision with the skills needs of enterprise 2013 - Update Guidelines for VECs’. Also Forfás, Future Skills Requirements of the Manufacturing Sector to 2020. Also Forfás, Future Skills Requirements of the Wholesale and Retail Sector. Also Forfás, Ireland’s Construction Sector: Outlook and Strategic Plan to 2015. 59 Build Up-Skills Ireland (BUSI), a joint IoT, CIF, ICTU initiative and is part of an EU wide initiative. 60 FIT, (2013), ICT Skills Audit Report. 61 International Council of Monuments and Sites, (2009) ‘Sustaining our Built Environment, Review of the State of Conservation Education and Training in Ireland’. 62 The Industrial Heritage Association of Ireland. 63 Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, (2010), Food Harvest 2020 ‘A Vision for Irish Agri-Food and Fisheries’. 64 Irish Hotels Federation, Irish Restaurants Association and Fáilte Ireland in individual discussions with SOLAS. 65 SMLRU, (2013) ‘Employment Forecasts 2020’. See also ESRI, Quarterly Economic Commentary, Winter 2013.