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TRANSVERSAL COMPETENCIES ESSENTIAL FOR FUTURE PROOFING THE WORKFORCE

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The urgent need to focus on transversal competencies is vividly apparent in a world where organisations, workforces and individuals are continuously subject to unprecedented complex change: rapid and radical technological advancements, the transformational forces and challenges of globalisation, environmental sustainability, demographic shifts and migration, and political uncertainty. We are required to operate with clarity, accountability and good judgement, and make difficult decisions, despite the vortex of uncertainty, ambiguity and volatility surrounding us. For organisations, workforces and citizens, learning to adapt to these momentous changes, which are coinciding to create an unprecedented impact on humanity (e.g. globalisation and artificial intelligence), represents a significant challenge, but is essential if they are to avoid becoming marginalised. The documentary analysis of a range of high-profile international and transnational sources from International Organisations reveals a broad emerging consensus on a common core of 10 transversal skills: digital competencies, problem-solving, initiative, learning to learn, cultural awareness, resilience, social intelligence, creativity, critical thinking, adaptability. This paper focuses on 7 of these core transversal skills: collaborative problem-solving; learning to learn, continuing to learn; digital competencies and mindset; initiative and independent thinking; resilience; adaptability; cultural awareness and expression. The paper also proposes a conceptual skills framework, since these global competencies are the essential foundation for the successful deployment of applied capabilities and cognitive skills.
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WHITE PAPER
TRANSVERSAL COMPETENCIES ESSENTIAL
FOR FUTURE PROOFING THE WORKFORCE
S. T. Whittemore
cultural awareness
and expression
digital
competencies
and mindset
collaborative
problem-solving
learning to learn,
continuing to learn
initiative and
independent
thinking
resilience
adaptability
Transversal Competencies essential for future proofing the workforce
White Paper
Simon Whittemore
July 2018
CONTENTS
Executive summary
Context and key drivers
Definition and origins
From Key competences to Transversal competencies
Essential Transversal competencies
1. Collaborative problem solving
2. Learning to learn, continuing to learn
3. Digital competencies and mindset
4. Initiative and independent thinking
5. Resilience
6. Adaptability
7. Cultural awareness and expression
Conceptual competency framework
Benefits of core transversal competencies and costs of not developing them
How and where do we learn and recognise these core competencies?
About Skilla
Bibliography
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Highlighting the global recognition of the critical role played by specific transversal compe-
tencies for eective participation in 21st century work and life, this White Paper is a call to ac-
tion, evidencing the pressing need for focussed attention, by organisations and individuals,
on continuous learning and development in these core competencies.
The urgent need to focus on transversal competencies is vividly apparent in a world where
organisations, workforces and individuals are continuously subject to unprecedented com-
plex change: rapid and radical technological advancements, the transformational forces and
challenges of globalisation, environmental sustainability, demographic shifts and migration,
and political uncertainty. We are required to operate with clarity, accountability and good
judgement, and make dicult decisions, despite the vortex of uncertainty, ambiguity and
volatility surrounding us. For organisations, workforces and citizens, learning to adapt to
these momentous changes, which are coinciding to create an unprecedented impact on
humanity (e.g. globalisation and artificial intelligence), represents a significant challenge, but
is essential if they are to avoid becoming marginalised.
To survive and to thrive in this competitive, hyper-connected, technology-driven glob-
al economy, organisations, workers and citizens need to develop and deploy a core set of
transversal competencies as the cornerstone for all their endeavours. These competencies,
such as collaborative problem-solving, and cultural awareness and expression, are the
currency that will enable them to make sense of the complex changes and to participate
as change agents and innovators, rather than merely as passengers.
Even more importantly, transversal competencies will
equip organisations, workers and citizens to control their
own destinies, rather than be controlled by external forces.
This Paper therefore poses the question “Which transversal and core competencies, not typ-
ically provided in formal education, does the 21st century citizen need to adapt and thrive in
work and in life, and why?
The White Paper proposes some answers to the above question, extrapolated from an anal-
Executive Summary
Executive Summary
5
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ysis and synthesis of key and definitive policy sources from the major International Organi-
sations (IOs), such as the World Economic Forum, European Commission, UNESCO and the
OECD. As these high-profile documentary sources themselves are the result of extensive
international research and the input of wide ranges of experts, they can be considered au-
thoritative. The objective therefore was to identify the overlaps and common points between
them, and thereby derive an implicit consensus on which are the most important transversal
competencies globally, how they relate both to each other and to other types of skills (cog-
nitive, technical) and the gaps in learning and development provision this reveals.
The documentary analysis of a range of high-profile international and transnational
sources from International Organisations reveals a broad emerging consensus on a
common core of 10 transversal skills: digital competencies, problem-solving, initia-
tive, learning to learn, cultural awareness, resilience, social intelligence, creativity,
critical thinking, adaptability.
This paper focuses on 7 of these core transversal skills: collaborative problem-solving;
learning to learn, continuing to learn; digital competencies and mindset; initiative and
independent thinking; resilience; adaptability; cultural awareness and expression.
cultural awareness
and expression
digital
competencies
and mindset
collaborative
problem-solving
learning to learn,
continuing to learn
initiative and
independent
thinking
resilience
adaptability
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The selection of 7 does not imply that the remaining three are less important, but that the
remaining three are often involved when the other seven are deployed; for example, collab-
orative problem-solving requires critical thinking, social intelligence and creativity, as do dig-
ital competencies; cultural awareness and expression requires social intelligence; learning to
learn, continuing to learn requires critical thinking.
There is one additional transversal competency, and character quality, which business lead-
ers have often cited as critically important1: empathy. The Harvard Business Review even
publishes an Empathy Index2. Empathy is an element of emotional intelligence, of social in-
telligence and of learning to learn. It’s exclusion among the 7 competencies examined in this
paper does not imply it is any less important – on the contrary - but rather that it can be con-
sidered among the essential values/ethics in work and in life, together with others such as in-
tegrity, ownership (i.e. sense of responsibility), respect and conscientiousness, which are not
within the scope of this paper, but are equally as important as the transversal competencies,
in any learner, citizen or worker. While the critical importance of emotional intelligence and
empathy in work and life is widely recognised, an analysis of any global consensus around
specific values and ethics would require a separate, more complex study.
The White Paper illustrates the approaches of key International Organisations and the find-
ings of international studies in terms of the relative importance of these transversal compe-
tencies. It highlights the key characteristics of each of the competencies, and the implica-
tions for organisations, workforces and citizens.
The paper also proposes a conceptual skills framework,
since these global competencies are the essential founda-
tion for the successful deployment of applied capabilities
and cognitive skills.
Some ways in which the development of transversal competencies could be supported and
advanced in citizens of the 21st century are also proposed.
The purpose of this document is to equip organisations, leaders and managers with knowl-
edge and awareness of the core transversal competencies that are critical for both individu-
als and organisations for successfully navigating the complex changes and opportunities in
the digital age, now and in the foreseeable future. Having read the document, readers will be
able to identify the key transversal competencies, have a deeper understanding of what they
entail, and a sharper awareness of why they are essential, and how they underpin other skills
and capabilities. They will also gain some insight into how to develop and integrate them
with existing training and education, and hopefully, the motivation to be inspired to do so!
1 https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/humanizing-business-comedy-central-coca-cola
2 https://hbr.org/2015/11/2015-empathy-index
Context and Key Drivers
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Transversal competencies have become more vital than ever in the hyper-connected
“knowledge society”, driven by globalisation, digital technology and extremely competitive
economic forces.
Living in an increasingly connected world, as organisations
and as individuals, means becoming aware of and subject
to comparisons, correlations, influences, opportunities
and risks which previously were not visible, perceptible or
so well understood, or by so many.
The pressures on organisations and their workforces to survive, adapt and thrive within this
dynamic, growing web of complex change is intense, since they will simply get left behind
if they do not. Survival means deploying the core competencies combined with specialist
knowledge, and knowing how to convert them to value in response to needs in the changing
marketplace. Thriving means mastering transversal competencies, knowledge and specialist
know-how and recombining them for the application of distinctive capabilities, answering
existing and unforeseen market needs, creating new value and shaping the changing mar-
ketplace.
Living in an increasingly connected and machine-built world creates its own pressures in
terms of the awareness of potential exclusion – including exclusion from sectors, markets
and jobs due to artificial intelligence - and the inequity of information or resource distribution
and ownership, and of their availability and usage. This combination of heightened aware-
ness and new opportunities brings people into conflict internationally (e.g. immigration and
jobs) and into constructive collaboration (e.g. international treaties to reverse environmental
damage). Eective transversal competencies, integrated into lifelong learning processes and
systems, are critical for enabling collaboration and co-existence rather than conflict, and
inclusion rather than exclusion, both for organisations and for individuals.
A 2017 study by Oxford University, NESTA and Pearson predicts that in 2030 social skills will
become more highly valued as artificial intelligence and machines perform a wider range
of tasks. The researchers conclude the future will be about humans and machines together
rather than humans versus machines. This will require a focussed eort to develop transver-
sal competencies.
Context and Key Drivers
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In a Financial Times article, Jo Owen calls for an urgent focus on human skills and soft skills
in the age of digital and artificial intelligence:
Success depends on equipping the next generation
with human skills that even AI cannot emulate: crea-
tivity, innovation, resilience, dealing with conflict, am-
biguity and uncertainty. We are not ready for this. We
have not even started to get ready
Jo Owen, Financial Times, 12/12/20171
Such transversal competencies are not generally a standard part of formal education, wheth-
er at school age or university age, so individuals need to develop, hone and evidence them
in other contexts. However, it may well be that individuals develop these competencies very
eectively through the challenges and opportunities they face in life without realising it; for
example someone who has had to overcome and adapt to significant social, physical
or circumstantial diculties and still remains positive and constructive will have devel-
oped a high level of resilience and adaptability, but they may not realise they have done.
Therefore this capability would need to be evidenced, citing briefly the experiences in which
these skills were honed, and demonstrating that they can adapt and be resilient in other/new
circumstances.
The digital age brings with it a new currency of information and communication and as
with all new currencies, there are significant implications, opportunities and risks in terms of
power and influence. Examples include the use of personal data for political and propaganda
purposes; trolling and cyber-bullying; bio-technology and security; the accelerated impact
via social media (positive examples in countries where there is political and social repression;
negative examples where social media is used to generate and stir-up hatred, such as ex-
tremist organisations and knife crime in London).
We therefore have a collective responsibility to ensure this extraordinary tool of enor-
mous power and influence - digital technology, which is driving the Fourth Industrial
Revolution - is a force for good, for tolerance, democracy, collaboration and construc-
tive learning. In doing so, we need to ensure it does not get exploited for destructive or
manipulative purposes. Most of all, digital tools, and the internet with its remarkable reach,
provide us with an extraordinary, unprecedented opportunity for vast numbers of people to
be empowered and enriched by multicultural, multimedia learning in all spheres of life. This
needs to be inclusive, in content, pedagogical method and style to accommodate motivat-
ed learners in all areas of society, not confined to elite education or exclusive training. This
paper demonstrates that the most important competencies to empower learners globally
for success in life and work are transversal soft skills, and calls for a concerted eort, by indi-
viduals, organisations and governments to harness the immense power of digital to human
skills for the good of learning.
1 https://www.ft.com/content/ab5daa64-d100-11e7-947e-f1ea5435bcc7
Context and Key Drivers
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Transversal competencies are also commonly referred to as soft skills, key competencies,
21st century skills, and global competencies. They are “the cornerstone for the personal de-
velopment of a person” (EU, ESCO1) and are fundamental for applying any knowledge or
skill. As the OECD2 noted in developing the PISA framework: “A competency is more than
just knowledge and skills. It involves the ability to meet complex demands, by drawing on
and mobilising psychosocial resources (including skills and attitudes) in a particular context”.
Transversal competencies have the following characteristics:
they are transferable across domains, geographies, work and life
contexts;
they typically relate to social and interpersonal relations;
they are cross-functional and cross-curricular in training and ed-
ucation, but can be combined in a blended learning approach, e.g.
collaborative problem-based learning;
communication is the key element in manifesting and evidencing
transversal skills; if not communicated explicitly, they can remain
undervalued or unrecognised;
they are essential tools in any context of significant and accelerated
change;
they can be observed, evidenced and developed, whereas develop-
ing values such as integrity in adults and changing ingrained charac-
ter traits is extremely dicult;
they are learnt through experience and development and cannot
be easily taught, except through highly interactive learning processes;
in their development, they have a symbiotic relationship with im-
proved self-awareness and self-knowledge.
In 1970 UNESCO began to promote increasingly widely accepted ideas on the importance
of lifelong learning to society, first with Paul Lengrand’s Lifelong Education then with Fau-
re’s report (1972) emphasising the ‘learning society’. The concept of the learning society be-
came established in the context of continual change and acknowledged need for learning
Definition and Origins
1 https://ec.europa.eu/esco/portal/escopedia/Cross-sector_skills_and_competences
2 PISA AND THE DEFINITION OF KEY COMPETENCIES, 2005: http://www.oecd.org/pisa/35070367.pdf
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throughout life in an enlightened society. Earlier lifelong learning pioneers such as Basil Ye-
axlee (Lifelong Education, 1929) had created the foundations for this concept.
The early signs of the growing international consensus around the importance of transversal
competencies for the 21st century were evident in 1996 in UNESCO’s historic Report of the
International Commission for Education in the 21st Century3.
This identified Four Pillars of education and in so doing helped to shift the balance from
teaching to learning: Learning to Live Together, Learning to Be, Learning to Know, Learn-
ing to Do.
The Commission also concluded that “learning how to learn” is the key for individuals to
adapt to the rapidly-changing world.
The first Pillar recognised the critical role of learning for mutual understanding in balanc-
ing the threats and opportunities inherent in the new globalised, technology-driven, hy-
per-competitive world. Learning to Be, which evoked Faure’s 1972 UNESCO publication of
the same name, emphasised the need, more essential than ever, forgreater independence
and judgement combined with a stronger sense of personal responsibility for the attainment
of common goals (UNESCO, 1996, p.23).
Jacques Delors stressed the vital importance of lifelong learning for everyone: “none of the
talents which are hidden like buried treasure in every person must be left untapped, and the
accompanying need for “greater self-knowledge” (Ibid.).
3 The Treasure Within: www.unesco.org/education/pdf/15_62.pdf
Definition and Origins
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From Key competences to
Transversal competencies
The recognition and development of these critical trans-
versal skills in all spheres of life has not kept pace with this
unprecedented rate of change, and this leaves organisa-
tions, workers and citizens exposed to the risk of margin-
alisation.
Therefore, an urgent need to improve the transversal skills of workers, learners and citizens is
recognised by many International Organisations, governments, businesses, employers, and
education and training providers worldwide.
As we will see below, several transversal skill frameworks have therefore emerged at national
and international level, but there is widespread uncertainty about which of these transversal
competencies are the most critical, about how they may fit into a conceptual taxonomy of
competencies and dovetail with more traditionally recognised cognitive and technical skills,
and about how these competencies can be integrated into existing training systems, devel-
oped and formally recognised. For example, how does an organisation go about developing
such “soft skills” in its workforce and embedding the competencies into practice and oper-
ations at an organisational level, when people are more accustomed to traditional learning
models, valuing specialist knowledge and having their interactions defined by administrative
organisational processes, or by a relatively closed organisational culture? In highlighting the
key transversal competencies, the paper explores some of these questions below.
In 2006, a Recommendation of the European Parliament set out 8 key competences for life-
long learning1, and defined the knowledge, skills and behaviours that comprise these com-
petences. The Recommendation also identified 7 underpinning transversal themes which
are the basis for the transversal competencies we recognise today.
In the 2006 Recommendation, “competence” and “competency” are synonymous, but that
is increasingly not the case in current usage. There is an important distinction to make be-
tween the two terms, albeit a distinction driven by usage, specifically in human resources
1 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32006H0962
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and personnel selection, rather than linguistic or etymological origins. While “competence
tends to be used as a synonym for “sucient ability to be eective” in something, “compe-
tency” tends to be used as a synonym for a combination of knowledge, skills and attitudes
for, as defined in the United Nations’2 careers structure as a “combination of skills, attributes
and behaviours that are directly related to performance on the job”.
“Competence” implies a more limited or circumscribed capability, whereas “competency”
implies an applied framework of skills and behaviour. This paper reflects the latter term and
definition and attempts to demonstrate how the individual transversal competencies are vital
in and of themselves, while at the same time being composed of and interwoven with other
skills, attitudes and behaviours (see Conceptual Framework for Skills in the 21st Century be-
low) whenever they are meaningfully applied in the real world.
Communication
in mother tongue
Communication in
foreign languages
Mathematical competence and
basic competence in science and technology
Digital competence
Learning to learn
Civic and Social competence
Sense of initiative and entrepreneurship
Cultural awareness and expression
Figure 1: 8 Key Competencies defined by the European Parliament
Recommendation 2006
2 United Nations – Competencies for the Future:
https://careers.un.org/lbw/attachments/competencies_booklet_en.pdf
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Problem solving
capability
Initiative
Constructive
management
of feelings
Risk
assessment
Decision
making
Critical
thinking
Creativity
Figure 2: 7 Transversal themes underpinning the Key Competencies, EU 2006
The 5 key competencies not typically catered for in standard formal education (in Figure 1,
reading left to right, from Digital Competencies to Cultural Awareness and Expression), plus
the 7 transversal themes the European Parliament ratified, together form the basis for the
transversal competencies increasingly regarded as core competencies globally. There are,
however, some overlaps between these, and some competencies that emerge as more crit-
ical and more widely empowering than others.
Of the 8 Key Competencies in the diagram in Fig.1, three are out of the scope of this paper as
they are standard components of the formal education process: Communication in Mother
Tongue, Communication in Foreign Languages, Mathematical Competence and Basic Com-
petence in Science and Technology.
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Essential transversal
competencies
14
Collaborative problem solving
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Essential transversal
competencies
1. Collaborative
problem solving
In a globalised, hyper-connected environment, people from dierent backgrounds and cul-
tures come into contact with each other more often than in the past, and at the same time
we face major challenges for humanity such as food security, inequality of economic op-
portunity, environmental and biodiversity sustainability, sustainable energy sources, and in-
creasing wealth inequality (Piketty, 2014).
In a highly competitive marketplace, companies need to continually innovate to survive,
whilst operating sustainably, with corporate and social responsibility, in the face of global
competition and reduced labour costs elsewhere.
People who can collaborate eectively to solve problems,
negotiate a way through these demanding challenges and
create new innovative opportunities, are at a premium.
Such collaborative problem-solving involves exercising other key competencies, notably
creativity, resilience, initiative, cultural awareness (including understanding “the other”), so-
cial intelligence and critical thinking.
It is no surprise, therefore that in the analysis of sources
from International Organisations, problem-solving is the
competency or capability which most frequently comes
first, alongside digital competencies.
In 2016, the World Economic Forum set out the Competencies, Foundational Literacies and
Character Qualities it concluded are essential in the 21st century in a “New Vision for Educa-
tion”.
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Figure 3: World Economic Forum, New Vision for Education 2016
This vision gave much more significance than previous educational models to the core
Competencies (problem-solving, collaboration and critical thinking) and Qualities (adapt-
ability, persistence/grit (resilience) and social and cultural awareness) needed to succeed in
education and life.
The WEF’s Future of Jobs report1, also released in 2016, focussed on labour market and oc-
cupational changes in the context of the Fourth Industrial Revolution and the digital age, as
distinct from the perspective of education.
However, it is striking how similar the sets of top skills re-
quired are in the two WEF forward-looking reports (key
competencies in education and life; top skills required in
the world of work); problem-solving emerges as a top crit-
ical skill and competency in both.
LIFELONG LEARNING
FOUNDATIONAL LITERACIES
HOW STUDENTS APPLY CORE
SKILLS TO EVERYDAY TASKS
1. Literacy
2. Numeracy
3. Scientific literacy
4. ICT literacy
5. Financial literacy
6. Cultural and civic
literacy
COMPETENCIES
HOW STUDENTS APPROACH
COMPLEX CHALLENGES
7. Critical thinking/
problem solving
CHARACTER QUALITIES
HOW STUDENTS APPROACH
THEIR CHANGING ENVIRONMENT
11. Curiosity
12. Initiative
13. Persistence/grit
14. Adaptability
15. Leadership
16. Social and cultural
awareness
Ab
c
1
238. Creativity
9. Communication
10. Collaboration
1 http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Future_of_Jobs.pdf
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Collaborative problem solving
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The survey research undertaken for the WEF’s The Future of Jobs revealed a consensus in the
top 5 skills required in 2020 as complex problem-solving, critical thinking, creativity, people
management, coordinating with others/collaboration, 4 of which are identified as key com-
petencies in New Vision for Education, so the commonality extends beyond problem-solv-
ing. In practice, complex problem-solving involves coordination and collaboration with oth-
ers and other fields of knowledge, as a complex problem is unlikely to be one that does not
aect others or require the input of others to resolve.
Top 10 skills
Figure 4: Top 10 Skills 2020, Future of Jobs Report, World Economic Forum, 2016
in 2020
1. Complex Problem Solving
2. Critical Thinking
3. Creativity
4. People Management
5. Coordinating with others
6. Emotional Intelligence
7. Judgment and Decision making
8. Service Orientation
9. Negotiation
10. Cognitive Flexibility
in 2015
1. Complex Problem Solving
2. Coordinating with others
3. People Management
4. Critical Thinking
5. Negotiation
6. Quality Control
7. Service Orientation
8. Judgment and Decision Making
9. Active Listening
10. Creativity
Having introduced “Problem-solving in technology-rich environments” in PISA since 2012,
the OECD initiated the measurement ofCollaborative Problem-Solving” in PISA in 2015 and
in the Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC).
The OECD concluded that this skill is fundamental in education and the workforce for nu-
merous reasons including:
The increase in project-based work in national contexts;
The fact that recent curriculum and instruction reforms have focussed to a greater extent
on the teaching and assessment of 21st century skills;
The fact that students need to prepare for careers that require the ability to work eective-
ly in groups and to apply their problem-solving skills;
Collaboration among team members is crucial to the success of work groups, corpora-
tions, public institutions, organisations and government agencies and families. One unco-
operative member of a team can have serious negative consequences on team success.
17
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The OECD defines “Collaborative Problem-solving” in PISA thus:
“Collaborative problem-solving competency is the capacity of an individual to eectively
engage in a process whereby two or more agents attempt to solve a problem by sharing
the understanding and eort required to come to a solution and pooling their knowl-
edge, skills and eorts to reach that solution”.
There have been numerous other authoritative sources that have recently emphasised the
vital importance of problem-solving, especially in collaboration., including the former UK
Commission for Education and Skills who define problem-solving as one of the “key skills for
the future” in The Future of Work Jobs and Skills in 2030.
Problem-solving has been integrated into pedagogic practice in innovative learning and
teaching models at many universities (for example, Maastricht University, Leicester Univer-
sity and Lancaster University). Usually in the guise of Problem-based Learning, this learning
model groups students, academic sta and business consultants around a problem to be
solved or opportunity to be unearthed, in order to develop the students’ collaborative skills,
to solve cross-sectoral problems and to create real new opportunities.
Solving thorny problems and creating new business op-
portunities in complex globalised contexts requires com-
binations of knowledge and competencies that are rarely
found in any one company or any single organisation.
As a result, open innovation has become increasingly prevalent in recognition of the fact that
external input and perspectives are usually essential for significant innovation and change.
In open innovation, and in change projects, collaborative problem-solving is a critical capa-
bility.
In practice, collaborative problem-solving involves combining a range of other soft skills
and qualities - including empathy, adaptability, initiative and independent thinking, and
working across cultural and organisational boundaries - with specialist competencies. In
an environment of constant change, with market disruption and challenges to existing busi-
ness models, problem-solving skills are the standard currency, highly sought-after across all
sectors. To function eectively in this context, all organisations need to be equipped with
collaborative problem-solving skills, which can be considered, together with digital compe-
tencies, as a quintessential skill of the 21st century.
18
Learning to learn, Continuing to learn
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2. Learning to learn,
Continuing to learn
Alongside collaborative problem-solving, learning to learn and continuing to learn emerges
as one of the most highly valued transversal skills globally. In an era of relentless and accel-
erated change, constant adaptation to and exploitation of new technologies, communica-
tion and processes which in the past unfolded over long timescales - if at all - are now
compressed into mere moments for the modern worker, who must rapidly synthesise a
wide range of external inputs and provide more sophisticated multi-channel compatible
outputs.
The ability to learn continuously, rapidly and systemically
is therefore more critical than ever.
This is true also across the career trajectory, as individuals increasingly need to rapidly learn,
combine and apply new skills and knowledge, to avoid becoming marginalised, just as or-
ganisations do.
The advances of technology and the eect of global competition have also significantly re-
duced the relative costs of experimentation, research and design for organisations, which
means they can innovate more rapidly and extend into new sectors, but to do so eectively
requires highly developed learning capabilities both at individual and organisational levels.
Applying new concepts and methods which are proving advantageous in the Fourth Indus-
trial Revolution, such as Agile development, service design or open innovation, requires con-
tinuous learning capacity on behalf of the workers, and critically, the ability to rapidly put in
practice the learning. If we consider the eect of convergence across previously separate
business sectors (necessary to solve problems and for competitive advantage), and the trans-
disciplinarity that both drives and is enriched by this, then we can see that the worker must be
an active and continuous learner at the centre of this complex vortex of change. As explained
below, the capacity for organisational “bildung” is a critical enabler.
Learning to learn and continuing to learn is therefore an intense lifelong process, without
end; there are a rich variety of learning strategies and learning methods, from recognised
pedagogical standards to personalised processes.
Essentially, learning to learn is also an attitude, an incli-
nation, but one that can be developed; the enlightened
learner perceives dierent contexts and experiences as
potential learning opportunities.
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Dedication to continuous learning, whether at policy or personal level, is driven by curiosity,
a quality considered by the World Economic Forum and other IOs as fundamental. Contin-
uous learning brings many rich fruits including the opportunity for transdisciplinarity, which
will be one of the ten top skills for the future workforce, according to the US Institute of the
Future1 in its report, “Future Work Skills 2020”.
The Canadian organisation EduGAINS2 provides ministry developed resources for schools
in the Ontario region. In 2016 EduGAINS developed a Global Competencies Framework3.
Together with problem-solving and collaboration, self-directed learning, including the pro-
cess of self-reflection, was proposed as one of 6 global competencies in this forward-look-
ing Framework:
Self-directed learning means: becoming aware and
demonstrating agency in one’s process of learning, in-
cluding the development of dispositions that support
motivation, perseverance, resilience, and self-regula-
tion.
(page 1, EduGAINS Global Competencies Framework)
Lifelong learning and equality of opportunity to learn are foremost among the United Na-
tions-led Sustainable Development Goals 2030 for education; Goal 4: “inclusive and equita-
ble quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all”.
The OECD, which defines and details “global competencies” in its 2018 PISA Handbook4
(p.4) states that “Acquiring global competence is a life-long process – there is no single point
at which an individual becomes completely globally competent”.
The concept that the learning process is lifelong and life-wide, rather than being limited to
formal education, is now broadly accepted both by international policymakers and individu-
als. However, it is less evident at the national level - individual European countries for exam-
ple - how and whether lifelong learning opportunities, and recognition of informal but no
less vital learning achievements, are actively supported and promoted. This may be in part
because globalisation, intense competition and the information revolution (via information
and communication technology) have created a subtle shift in the international discourse
from ‘learning society’ to ‘knowledge society’.
1 http://www.iftf.org/uploads/media/SR-1382A_UPRI_future_work_skills_sm.pdf
2 http://www.edugains.ca/newsite/21stCenturyLearning/index.html
3 http://www.edugains.ca/resources21CL/21stCenturyLearning/FrameworkofGlobalCompetencies_
AODA.pdf
4 http://www.oecd.org/pisa/Handbook-PISA-2018-Global-Competence.pdf
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Delors made an explicit and constructive link between the learning and knowledge society
in 1996 in ‘The Treasure Within’, then the OECD with ‘Knowledge Management in the Learn-
ing Society’ (2000). However, since then ‘the knowledge society’ has largely replaced the
‘learning society’ as a widely stated political aspiration, and more recently the ‘knowledge
economy’ has become more prominent than ‘the knowledge society’.
To fully realise the value of learning to learn and continuing to learn, it is worth exploring
briefly the relationship between knowledge and learning. A major dierence between knowl-
edge and learning concerns power and agency. For Foucault knowledge is not power per
se, but knowledge and power and intrinsically entwined: “mechanisms of power produce
dierent types of knowledge which collate information on people’s activities and existence.
The knowledge gathered in this way further reinforces exercises of power.” 5
It is widely agreed that a core characteristic of learning, and therefore of the transfer of
knowledge, is that it is essentially social. If one recognises and accepts ‘the intrinsic sociality
of knowledge’, (Muller 2012, p.2), and ‘the social process of learning’ substantiated by Jarvis
(2007, p.7), then that implies that knowledge has little value other than data and memo-
ry until it is shared beyond the individual. Put another way, acquisition of information or
knowledge does not constitute learning until the information is actively contextualised
by the learner, within their social, personal or professional milieu. Learner agency is key:
knowledge is by necessity mediated through personal experience, to become learning.
Jean Lave and Etienne Wenger, in their work on situated and participative learning, under-
lined the experiential and social nature of learning and established the notion of communities
of practice, and the importance of learning through practice. Experiential learning, for many
pedagogy experts is not the same as active learning, in that the latter involves the learner’s
own responsibility and agency. Participative learning and active learning, which have their
origins in Vygotsky’s activity theory6, chime with the German concept of bildung, deliberate
full self-development for wider social good, actively developing what is currently termed as
a “growth mindset”.
Bildung requires learner agency and responsibility, con-
sciously involving the hand, the heart and the mind - and
therefore all the transversal competencies - in self-cultiva-
tion.
Enriched and shared learning contexts, whether in person, online or blended, help to mod-
erate the transference of power with knowledge, since such communities of practice enable
a more reciprocal and less hierarchical learning process and a more gradual movement from
novice to expert, rather than the traditional unilateral bestowal of knowledge by the master
to the passive student. Online communities of practice have become widespread as learning
5 O’Farrell 2007, www.michelfoucault.com
6 http://www.education.ox.ac.uk/research/osat/
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forums, and together with other new learning approaches, such as corporate academies, are
part of a rich learning landscape in and across organisations which provide new opportuni-
ties for learning to learn and continuing to learn, especially through shared practice.
There appears to be a renewed interest in this organic capability of learning, whether at in-
dividual, professional group or organisational level, to generate greater autonomy and the
capacity to apply knowledge in an innovative way. A comprehensive study7 by Pearson, the
UK innovation agency NESTA and Oxford University in 2017 revealed that Learning Strate-
gies, Active Learning and Education and Training will be the most sought-after skills in 2030
from both the UK and the USA perspectives. The researchers analysed 7 mega-trends and
derived, via expert foresight workshops and the use of a machine learning algorithm, job and
skill predictions for the US and UK. The megatrends analysed echo those which have shaped
the International Organisations’ conclusions on key competencies: technological change,
globalisation, increasing equality, demographic change, environmental sustainability, ur-
banisation and political uncertainty.
TOP SKILLS FOR 2030
The top 10 skills, abilities, and knowledge associated with rising occupations as follows.
1. Learning Strategies
2. Psychology
3. Instructing
4. Social perceptiveness
5. Sociology and Anthropology
6. Education and Training
7. Coordination
8. Originality
9. Fluency of ideas
10. Active Learning
1. Judgment and Decision Making
2. Fluency of Ideas
3. Active Learning
4. Learning strategies
5. Originality
6. Systems evaluation
7. Deductive reasoning
8. Complex Problem solving
9. Systems analysis
10. Monitoring
US UK
Figure 5: Pearson, NESTA and Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford, 2017
7 https://www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/news/2017_news_future_of_skills_report
https://futureskills.pearson.com/
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The study was unusual in itself, in that the methodology used combined active learning
and machine learning with traditional human research methods. The conclusion that active
learning and learning strategies are top critical skills for the workforce, now and in the future,
resonates strongly with Wenger’s participative learning and Vygotsky’s Activity Theory re-
ferred to above. However active learning has implications for organisations too.
The concept and practice of the learning organisation, which has recently become well
established, adds a further dimension to the competency of learning to learn that is worth
highlighting here. The worker’s individual journey of continuous transformation in the face
of technological and global change is mirrored by the organisation’s continuous transforma-
tion as an active learning organisation. In practice, this means “joining the dots in a way that
maximises collective learning potential”8 and it is a challenging and continuous endeavour.
I would propose the following 10 open learning principles to define what being a learning
organisation means:
1. keeping the organisation secure but knowledge-porous for open innovation;
2. being operationally agile, but consistent, with a clear identity;
3. looking after and engaging the employees and partners;
4. ensuring it is a place where people enjoy working and are stimulated;
5. providing continuous learning opportunities, both at the individual level and within and
across groups and organisational boundaries;
6. stimulating self-learning, empowering and developing sta to continuously strive to
better themselves, using creative methods such as games and contests sensitively;
7. encouraging curiosity, being culturally open to new ideas and experimentation
8. in development projects, being unafraid of failure, but balancing investment, risk and
learning dividend judiciously;
9. accommodating dierent opinions and learning styles;
10. harnessing diversity and pluralism, to reflect the diversity and pluralism in society and in
the actual and potential markets served.
We can see therefore that learning to learn and continuing to learn, whilst being a key com-
petency for self-motivated workers, depends on collective and coordinated responsibility
within organisations to be fruitful. Here we encounter once again the concept of bildung,
but we introduce a new concept: organisational bildung. It is not only the learner who is
empowered and self-motivated to strive for the full cultivation and development of his/her
talents and abilities in order to realise their full potential.
The learning organisation too is driven by commitment to
its own cultivation and maturation as a collective endeav-
our in order to operate eectively in the ever-changing
economic and cultural context.
8 Sharon Varney, https://www.alchemyformanagers.co.uk/topics/aDLuzP9YRKgdeLvf.html
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Self-knowledge is a vital component of learning to learn and continuing to learn, both for
individuals and organisations. EduGAINS, among others, has highlighted the importance of
self-reflection as an inherent part of learning. Self-reflection leads to self-knowledge and
intrinsic within genuine learning is the development of self-knowledge.
Midgley (2006, p.125) points out that a lack of self-knowledge can be a moral fault and a bar-
rier to our own learning because it blocks our understanding of other people. And therefore
‘cognitive success depends on moral attitude’ (ibid, p.202) to others.
Clearly a capacity for self-knowledge is developed in the earlier stages of life, but it is quite
possible to emerge from formal education with a deficit in this capacity, since this is often
masked by widespread assumptions around knowledge acquisition and demonstration, ex-
acerbated through traditional screening processes of candidates for jobs and courses.
Soft skills such as empathy, resilience and versatility are vital qualities in this regard, and are
defining factors in the progression of learners in the world of work and in life beyond formal
education.
There are an increasing number of policy initiatives, and instruments such as self-directed
digital learning tools, for example using open badges and digital certification.
These innovative platforms are embedding reflection in
the learning process and recasting learning identities, rec-
ognising the transversal skills, such as self-awareness and
problem-solving, that are not formally certified but are
critical skills for life and work.
Once recognised (both by oneself and by others) and developed in a process of continual
learning, such skills can help to navigate complex change, and create opportunities where
previously there appeared to be only constraints. Furthermore, these skills help to deliver the
benefits of the “learning society”, rather than merely reinforce the “knowledge economy”.
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3. Digital competencies
and mindset
Digital competencies are not only a critical enabler for organisations to operate eciently
and eectively, but they are also transformative for businesses, acting as a key driver for
growth and innovation.
Well-developed digital skills enable organisations to be
more agile operationally, to apply unprecedented levels of
business intelligence, to navigate changing marketplaces
and to respond to customer expectations, which are radi-
cally dierent to those of just 15 years ago.
The customer experience has been transformed by digital technology, and ICT in gen-
eral, both in private and public sectors, and this has been a key driver in the reinvention of
the increasingly dominant service sector. In sectors such as financial, manufacturing and
education, digital competencies and tools have revolutionised the customer journey and the
supply chain.
A high level of well-integrated digital competencies can deliver a significant competitive ad-
vantage to organisations, especially if deployed in combination with the other key transversal
and technical skills. Digital technology and computing power have delivered a massive boost
to business capability, and when combined with a people-centred organisational culture of
openness, experimentation and adaptability, and based on sound business processes, pro-
vide the power for innovation and collaboration. That is why most modern organisations
have embedded a digital strategy in their overall business strategy, instead of merely de-
ploying digital and ICT tools as an add-on. However, as we shall see, digital competencies
encompass a wide range of skills, transversal, cognitive and technical, as well as a specific
mindset.
Until recently, digital skills were synonymous with ICT skills and categorised as cognitive
competences in international organisations’ policies and in national education and training.
As the internet and the digital world have become all-pervasive in society (even those geo-
graphic areas that have fewer computers often have a high level of mobile phone access), it
is having a transformative eect on all areas of life from political to business to personal, and
thus digital skills have become transversal skills.
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This is especially the case because technical capability is only one aspect of digital skills; the
cognitive and technical elements remain, but are far from sucient by themselves.
The digital skillset involves the eective and integrated use
of a wide range of soft skills, which provide the ability to
deploy the technical skills and the digital tools in the ser-
vice of organisational strategy and business objectives.
For example, a sophisticated online CRM tool can only deliver the expected benefits if the or-
ganisation has relationship management skills and clear processes for data sharing and data
management. In other words, having eective digital competencies means being able to
deploy technology judiciously, and to serve a clear business or social purpose, while a deficit
in this transversal competency leads organisations to expect software to solve problems and
objectives when it is not integrated into the people and processes that define the organisa-
tion. Furthermore, developing digital competencies is more cost-eective than deploying
expensive software tools; it is possible to perform many business functions these days with
freely available tools on the internet.
DIGITAL CONTENT CREATION
INFORMATION
AND DATA LITERACY
COMMUNICATION AND
COLLABORATION SAFETY
PROBLEM
SOLVING
Figure 6: Digicomp 2.1, European Commission, 2017
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In Digicomp 2.1, the European Commission identifies the key soft skills involved in digital
competencies; among the 5 Competence Areas, three transversal capabilities are prominent:
creativity, problem-solving, collaboration (3 Content creation; 5 Problem-solving; 2 Com-
munication and Collaboration). Among the 21 Competences, other global transversal skills
are strongly implicated: critical thinking (1.2 Evaluating Information, Data and Data Content;
1.1 Browsing, Searching and Filtering Data, Information and Digital Content; 4.2 Protecting
Personal Data and Privacy); initiative (5.2 Identifying Needs and Technological Responses);
cultural awareness (2.2 Sharing through digital technologies; 2.3 Engaging in citizenship
through digital technologies).
Silo-based or indiscriminate use of digital, without due regard for people, process and busi-
ness objectives can have a weakening eect1 on the very soft skills that we need to value and
develop. Indeed, this calls for skills in contextualisation, rapid information analysis and syn-
thesis, sensemaking and critical thinking as key components of digital competencies. Digital
capability needs to be embedded at the top and throughout the organisation, not just among
specialists, as it requires vision, leadership and ongoing communication to deliver key ben-
efits such as enhancing organisational capacity and eciency, or empowering learning and
development.
Developing and integrating digital competencies enables organisations to be digitally literate
as a minimum, and to work towards full digital proficiency. Here are ten key steps I would
recommend on the digital transformation journey:
1. Defining and embedding a digital strategy, mapped to business strategy, integrating IT
departments and processes;
2. Define a digital maturity roadmap for your organisation, adapting the Digicomp frame-
work and its proficiency levels;
3. Using digital means, i.e. eLearning, to ensure all sta have a basic understanding of dig-
ital safety, device security, data protection (GDPR) and data sharing principles;
4. Develop awareness of business intelligence across the organisation, an understanding
of how this contributes to competitive advantage, and a basic ability in data visualisation;
5. Ensure collaboration and creative development on digital platforms is built into oper-
ational standards, and educate sta in the power and benefits of real-time collaboration
and co-creation;
6. Use coaching, mentoring activities and role shadowing/secondment projects to help
spread digital competencies across the organisation, identifying change agents who
can enthuse others, and who are sensitive to people’s objections and constraints;
7. Develop in sta at least an understanding of search engine optimisation, analytics tools,
web page creation tools etc.;
8. Encourage contributions to corporate blogs, and responsible, professional use of so-
cial media where appropriate for business objectives, e.g. marketing;
9. Ensure sta develop a sound understanding of the customer digital journey and ensure
some sta know how the related services can be designed and optimised;
10. Develop an understanding of cloud services and the shift to computing as a utility and
software as a service.
1 https://www.trainingzone.co.uk/lead/culture/soft-skills-why-digital-technology-is-killing-communica-
tion
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A digitally proficient organisation is also aware of and educates sta in the potential pitfalls
of social and professional digital media. Workers and citizens need to be aware that most
large technology companies routinely promote, via feeds and advertising, information that
reflects the individual’s apparent interests, and thus the learning context online risks becom-
ing a mere reflection of the learner’s own predilections and limitations. Information over-
load in the digital context can result in one’s own perspectives and assumptions being
reinforced and narrowed rather than challenged or broadened.
For the citizen, especially when working outside the protected organisational context, there
is a risk therefore of an inversion of the idea that knowledge, especially as part of learning
and education, should help us broaden and deepen our understanding of others, of the
world and ourselves. Technologies of machine reading, sentiment analysis and related uses
of complex algorithms are immensely powerful and bring enormous benefits for organisa-
tions, but it is wise to bear in mind that these tools are only as sensitive and culturally aware
as the humans that created them.
Such risks can be mitigated by developing a good level of digital competency and under-
standing the benefits and opportunities for democratic health and for innovation of open
data and open knowledge, balanced with the recognition for careful management and align-
ment with social values and business objectives. Globally there is a strong movement for
open learning and open knowledge, and for the use of the internet as a free, open global
communication and collaboration tool, linking millions of people, assets and information
sources, enabling secure distributed networks like blockchain, as its originator, Tim Bern-
ers-Lee envisaged.
In the field of learning and development, digital tools and
the internet provide an unprecedented opportunity for a
rich, memorable, interactive learning process, directly in-
terlinked with business needs.
It is no surprise that Open Educational Resources feature among UNESCO’s Sustainable De-
velopment Goals 2030. Digital learning tools, creatively and sympathetically designed and
managed, can transform and empower the learning process, especially where there is open
or widespread access to knowledge.
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4. Initiative and
Independent thinking
The 21st century is a much more confusing, less reassuring but perhaps more exciting world
than past centuries in which societies and companies did not have or perceive the complex
choices, challenges and opportunities that are commonplace today, whether these relate to
the family unit, business models, communication methods or health and medicine interven-
tion for example. Received wisdom from familiar, comforting sources of authority such as
the state or elders no longer holds water in a world of unimagined new possibilities, global
connectivity, volatility and new perceived threats. In many ways, we are experiencing a sec-
ond Renaissance, as Ian Goldin has observed: “this is by far the best time in human history to
be alive, this is a new Renaissance driven by an information revolution1”.
The ubiquity of access to information paradoxically results
in a much higher level of ambiguity.
One piece of ancient wisdom, the old adage of “the more you know the less you under-
stand”, still holds true despite the revolutionary advances in technology, the mass availability
of education and the global access to information (obviously in some regions and societies
such access is limited for various reasons such as conflict or poverty). Indeed, Goldin also
highlighted, however, that “periods of exceptionally disruptive progress [like the Renaissance
and the current age] have the seeds of destruction in them and they need to be eec-
tively managed”(ibid.).
This ambiguity is because of the complexity of the global knowledge society, as well as the
fact that there are competing versions of the truth, and advances in knowledge that provide
opportunities but qualify, redefine and recontextualise what was previously regarded as ab-
solute knowledge. Learning and development models are correspondingly much less didac-
tic, and much more participative and pluralistic in their approach.
Amidst this ambiguity, complexity and the relative reduc-
tion of authoritative direction, the ability to demonstrate
initiative, proactivity and an enterprising attitude is there-
fore more highly valued.
It is precisely this initiative and independent thinking that informs the judgement and deci-
sion making which is regarded as the top UK skill 2030 in the NESTA/Oxford Martin/Pearson
report.
1 http://oecdobserver.org/files/coeessg/GOLDIN_Brochure.pdf
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FUTURE WORK SKILLS 2020
While all six drivers are important in shaping the landscape in which each skill emerges,
the color-coding and placement here indicate which drivers have particular relevance
to the development of each of the skills.
SUPERSTRUCTED
ORGANIZATIONS
Social technology
drive new forms
of production and
value creation
COMPUTATIONAL
WORLD
Massive increase in
sensors and processing
power make the world
a programmable
system
EXTREME
LONGEVITY
Increasing global
lifespans change
the nature of careers
and learning
RISE OF SMART
MACHINES AND
SYSTEMS
Workplace robotics
nudge human
workers out of rote,
repetitive tasks
Trans
disciplinarity
Sense-
Making
Novel and
Adaptive
Thinking
Social
Intelligence
Computational
thinking
Cognitive
load
management
Cross
cultural
competency
Virtual
collaboration
Design
mindset
GLOBALLY
CONNECTED WORLD
Increased global intercon-
nectivity puts diversity
and adaptability at center
of organizational
operations
Drivers - disruptive shifts that will
reshape the workforce landscape
Key skill needed in the future workforce
KEY
NEW MEDIA
ECOLOGY
New communication
tools require new
media literacies
beyond text
New
Media
literacy
Figure 7: Future Work Skills 2020, Institute of the Future, University of Phoenix, Arizona
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Being proactive and independent-minded is also more eective than being a relatively
passive participant. The education system traditionally has steeped people in knowledge,
but not always developed the initiative or the independent thinking that creates opportu-
nities and contributes to problem-solving in organisations. Indeed, behaviours showing in-
itiative tend to be curbed in traditional education, or the old model of the rigid, hierarchical
organisation.
Workers in the digital age need to be able to act eectively and swiftly in complex situations
without being asked to do so every time; they need to apply skills such as rapid analysis and
synthesis to unearth opportunities and they need to be able to perceive problems within
their organisation and beyond, before they arise. In short, they need to be autonomous but
responsible and to achieve that, the competencies of initiative and independent thinking are
fundamental.
Initiative is a core transversal quality both for the World Economic Forum and for the Euro-
pean Commission, and looms very large in the Institute for the Future’s Report Future Work
Skills 20202 (fig. 7).
According to the Institute of the Future’s analysis, the computational world, hyper-con-
nectivity and the rise of smart systems call for “Novel, Adaptive Thinking” and “Sense-mak-
ing. Clearly independent thinking and initiative are inherent in novel and adaptive thinking.
Sense-making reflects “an increasing demand for the kinds of skills machines are not good
at” (p.8, Future Work Skills 2020, Institute for the Future) and requires the application of a set
of transversal skills, including independent thinking, which are capable of creating unique
insights critical for decision-making. Sense-making also requires cognitive flexibility, a top
10 skill for 2020 according to the World Economic Forum and “cognitive load management”,
also a top ten skill for the Institute of the Future.
So, in this fast-moving, inter-connected, promising and
digitally empowered context, individuals and organisations
need to ensure they don’t merely become passengers on
the digital journey, but are able to demonstrate initiative,
proactivity and independent thinking to exercise choices,
harness resources and create new opportunities.
A robust mental backbone of independent and critical thinking is therefore essential for the
21st century worker and citizen, With this mental backbone, we are able to optimise the
essential drive of curiosity and the set free the power of initiative and proactivity by applying
objective reflection, attentiveness and rapid appraisal, as part of our learning framework.
2 http://www.iftf.org/uploads/media/SR-1382A_UPRI_future_work_skills_sm.pdf
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5. Resilience
Resilience is a relative newcomer to the global stage for transversal competencies and has
come to the forefront because of the accelerated rate of change we are experiencing, glob-
ally. Because of global competitiveness, rapid changes and surrounding uncertainty, people
in the workplace and in their careers are subject to higher pressures, more demanding ap-
praisals and interviews, and unforeseen events, such as being made redundant, or rapid-
ly falling from financial prosperity to economic insecurity. Organisations are subject to the
same pressures, and the eect can be collectively more damaging. Resilience in new chal-
lenging situations is therefore an essential competency: developing individual and organisa-
tional resilience is a vital component of success and sustainability.
Resilience in workers means the ability to stay positive, adaptable and eective, when suf-
fering setbacks such as failed innovations, backfiring interventions, criticism or demanding
clients.
The key to exercising eective resilience in such contexts is
treating such problems as challenges that one learns from
through engaging with, combatting and overcoming; see-
ing the germ of a new idea or opportunity in the embers of
a failure.
Resilience in individuals and organisations means the ability to recover quickly from setbacks,
and to treat diculties as opportunities to create solutions. Clearly, in practice, therefore, re-
silience is often combined with initiative, problem-solving and adaptability.
The World Economic Forum refers to resilience as “persistence/grit”, while the Global Peace
Foundation names it as one of the 4 key character standards. The US Oce of Personnel
Management1 lists resilience as one of 6 fundamental capabilities in leading change.
1 https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/assessment-and-selection/reference-materials/proficien
cylevelsleadershipcomp.pdf
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CHARACTER AND CREATIVITY STANDARDS
Purpose
• Motivation
• Vision
• Ownership
Learning
• Competence
• Reflection
Character
• Integrity
• Respect
• Resilience
• Conscientiousness
Creativity
• Innovation
• Problem Solving
• Critical Thinking
Relationships
• Communication
• Collaboration
• Connectedness
Figure 8: Character and Creativity Standards, Global Peace Foundation, 2016
As is the case with many transversal skills, resilience is equally important at the organisational
level. In a competitive global marketplace, companies need both resilience and adaptability
to survive and thrive, as much as individuals do. This is especially critical for small and me-
dium-sized businesses where the ability to bend and adapt but not break in the face of
globalisation and disruptive technology is a key to survival. Large businesses also require
great resilience to deal with the complexity of operating in a coordinated way, dealing with
conflicting local diculties, in multiple sectors and territories. Gartner urged organisations
to invest in three disciplines to increase trust and resilience2, and obviously in the digital age,
cyber-resilience for a company is critical, given the increasing number and complexity of
threats to information security and business continuity. Neryl East has also oered 5 key traits
for resilient organisations which all organisations3 would do well to heed.
However, as Judith Armstrong notes in an article on business resilience for the small business
network in the Guardian4:
“Business resilience is no dierent to personal resilience - ultimately it’s about your support
network – as an individual, building resilience comes from your friends and family, in a busi-
ness it comes from your relationships with your customers, your sta, your shareholders.
Inequality, and our increasing awareness of it, is one of the global challenges defining our
world, and it goes without saying that resilience is a critical competency where the inequality
bites. As Wilkinson and Pickett demonstrated in 2009, “Relative inequality”5 is what divides
societies and creates a vast range of social and health problems, and is a less visible but per-
vasive problem.
2 https://www.gartner.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/2015-09-28-gartner-says-organizations-must-
invest-in-three-risk-principles-to-increase-trust-and-resilience
3 https://collectivehub.com/2017/08/the-5-key-traits-of-a-resilient-organisation/
4 https://www.theguardian.com/small-business-network/2018/may/30/the-path-to-resilience-how-to-
thrive-in-turbulent-times
5 Wilkinson and Pickett, the Spirit Level, 2009
33
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This means that the capacity of resilience is being wide-
ly developed but is largely unrecognised and is not being
tapped into as a learning and development opportunity.
Relative inequality also applies to access to support networks; someone from a very restrict-
ed socio-economic background, who has not benefited from a good standard of education
and has lived, like their parents perhaps, in an economically deprived area has a very limited
network to call upon, through no fault of their own.
However, in such cases, as long as the digital divide has been bridged and there is good
broadband and technology available, digital learning and networking opportunities which
previously seemed impossible can be provided through public and corporate sources, creat-
ing and recognising new possibilities and opportunities for people who had previously been
marginalised, and indeed potentially making a positive example of their remarkable resilience
in the face of diculty, from which others can learn.
34
Adaptability
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6. Adaptability
For the P21 Group (Partnership for 21st Century Learning)1, adaptability and flexibility come
top of the list of Life and Career Skills needed in the 21st century, and need to be developed
continually, from an early age. Given the triumvirate of defining influences on 21st century
life – globalisation, digital, constant change – this is entirely logical. The World Economic
Forum too, highlights adaptability as one of 6 key character qualities in their New Vision for
Education.
21st Century Education
Flexibility and Adaptability
Adapting to varied roles and responsibilities
Working eectively in a climate of ambiguity and changing priorities
Initiative & Self-Direction
Monitoring one’s own understanding and learning needs
Going beyond basic mastery of skills and/or curriculum to explore and expand
one’s own learning and opportunities to gain expertise
Demonstrating initiative to advance skill levels towards a professional level
Defining, prioritizing and completing tasks without direct oversight
Utilizing time eciently and managing workload
Demonstrating commitment to learning as a lifelong process
Social and cross cultural skills
Working appropriately and productively with others
Leveraging the collective intelligence of groups when appropriate
Bridging cultural dierences and using diering perspectives to increase inno-
vation and the quality of work
Figure 9: P21: Partnership for 21st Century Skills
1 http://www.p21.org/about-us/p21-framework/266-life-and-career-skills
35
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Employers expect new and potential recruits to have demonstrated, throughout their ca-
reer, flexibility of attitude and aptitude, and versatility in response to changing requirements
and circumstances. Any job candidate or employee without adaptability skills will struggle to
succeed in any organisation. It is perhaps because this skill requirement is so obvious, that
adaptability escapes attention often in transversal competency lists.
However, such omissions are regrettable, because having well-developed adaptability skills
enables one to not only better manage the impact of change on oneself, but also develop
highly valuable change management skills, including the ability to analyse and synthesise
the “as-is” situation, to perceive and work towards the “to-be” situation, to empathise with
those aected by change and therefore to develop practical solutions to mitigate the eect
of change and constructive plans to enable a necessary change to be eectively embedded.
Good adaptability skills, when put into practice in context, can therefore often enable
the practitioner to exert more influence and have a greater stake in what the change will
look like.
Good adaptability skills enable us to “change gear” without
“stalling the engine” when faced with changing priorities
and demands.
Combined with resilience, they enable us to see problems as challenges and opportunities,
to stay positive when faced with diculty. Most importantly of all, they enable us to treat the
process of adapting to changes as an enriching learning experience, which will make similar
challenges more easily surmountable in the future.
The ability to adapt with minimum fuss and maximum eectiveness is agility, also a high-
ly valued individual and organisational competency, so much so that an entire business
approach, the Agile movement, has developed from this principle, and from lean manufac-
turing. The Agile innovation movement originated in Japan, the ideas gaining traction with
the publication, in the Harvard Business Review, of “The New New Product Development
Game” by Takeuchi and Nonaka, in which the writers proposed a “rugby” approach to busi-
ness innovation and eciency: “where a team tries to go the whole distance as a unit, pass-
ing the ball back and forth.2
On his website “7 survival skills”, Tony Wagner uses a quote by the President of a large US cor-
poration to illustrate precisely why adaptability and agility skills are now more highly valued
competencies than specific technical skills:
I’ve been here four years, and we’ve done fundamental reorganization every year because
of changes in the business…I can guarantee the job I hire someone to do will change or may
not exist in the future, so this is why adaptability and learning skills are more important than
technical skills.
Clay Parker, President of Chemical Management Division of BOC Edwards
2 https://hbr.org/2016/04/the-secret-history-of-agile-innovation
36
Cultural awareness and expression
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7. Cultural awareness
and expression
Naturally, in a more globalised, connected and “smaller” world, where people more frequent-
ly come into contact with people from other cultures, cultural awareness and expression is
prominent among global transversal competencies; the World Economic Forum, European
Union, Institute of the Future (Cross-cultural Competency) and the OECD all consider it a
core transversal skill.
For businesses, facing new competition in open markets
from all over the world, and coming up against compet-
itors who have the scale or the reduced labour costs to
render their business uncompetitive and unsustainable,
the opportunities and threats are considerable.
Individuals too now realise that there may be new international pastures for their talents to
grow, but that they need to be able to operate eciently across cultural boundaries to take
advantage of these opportunities and not be left behind.
The ability to work across cultural boundaries and adapt to
dierent cultural norms with agility, respect and eciency
is therefore paramount.
Obviously, cognitive abilities in language and cultural knowledge are important components
of cross-cultural competencies, especially for cultural expression, but even without the cog-
nitive elements there is a great deal one can do to develop cross-cultural competencies
in terms of attitude, openness, awareness, self-knowledge, curiosity, learning to learn and
continuing to learn.
37
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Examine local,
global and
Intercultural
issues
Understand
and appreciate
the perspectives
and world views
of others
Engage in open,
appropriate and
eective Interactions
across cultures
Global
competence
Take action
for collective
well-being
and sustainable
development
Knowledge
Skills
Values
Attitudes
Figure 10: Dimensions of Global Competence, OECD, PISA Handbook, 2018
The OECD’s Global Competencies, defined in the PISA Handbook 2018, are all about con-
structive cultural interaction:
1. the capacity to examine issues and situations of local, global and cultural significance e.g.
poverty, economic interdependence, migration, inequality, environmental risks, conflicts,
cultural dierences and stereotypes;
2. the capacity to understand and appreciate dierent perspectives and world views;
3. the ability to establish positive interactions with people of dierent national, ethnic,
religious, social or cultural backgrounds or gender;
4. the capacity and disposition to take constructive action toward sustainable development
and collective well-being.
38
Context and Key Drivers
39
www.skilla.co.uk
Each of these competencies by themselves are not sucient to create an impact or solve a
problem for example; there are two reasons for this.
Underpinning each of these competencies is a set of be-
haviours, without which the competency itself cannot be
eectively deployed.
For example, problem-solving requires openness to collaboration, analytical approach, em-
pathy and exercising the imagination.
Secondly, in practice, the application of any such competency goes hand in hand with the
deployment of others. That is to say, the eective application of such competencies usually
requires the dynamic integration of three skill levels: qualities (e.g. empathy, attentiveness),
capabilities (e.g. communication skills, change management ability) and expertise (e.g. cog-
nitive knowledge in IT or in international aairs).
Indeed, in 2006 when the European Parliament defined the 8 core competencies for lifelong
learning with a European Reference Framework, the knowledge, skills and attitudes pertinent
to each of the core competencies were set out1.
Similarly, the OECD has defined each core competency it measures in PISA as comprising
knowledge, skills, attitudes and values, intertwined and applied for action.
“Competence” is not merely a specific skill but is a combination of knowledge, skills,
attitudes and values successfully applied to face-to-face, virtual or mediated encounters
with people who are perceived to be from a dierent cultural background” (OECD PISA
Handbook 2018, p6).
1 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:32006H0962
Conceptual Competency
Framework
PISA 2030 AND CCI FRAMEWORKS
Disciplinary knowledge
Interdisciplinary knowledge
Practical knowledge
Knowledge
Attitudes
& Values
Cognitive and meta-cognitive skills
Social and emotional skills
Physical and practical skills
Skills Action
Competencies
Figure 11: OECD PISA 2030 Vision
Transversal competencies essential for future proofing the workforce
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The Conceptual Framework below is an attempt to demonstrate how transversal competen-
cies are both underpinning core qualities and applied transversal capabilities.
These core competencies act as the building blocks both
for each other and for putting into practice applied and
specialist domain-level expertise, which depend on their
solid foundation.
Eective two-way communication requires empathy for example, and in order to commu-
nicate specialist expertise to non-specialists and apply it in other contexts - for instance to
address wider societal problems – learning of the other contexts, social intelligence and
critical thinking are all required.
LEVEL 3: SPECIALIST
LEVEL 2: APPLIED
LEVEL 1: CORE
DOMAIN(S) LEVEL
EXPERTISE
WIDELY APPLICABLE
TRANSVERSAL SKILLS
UNDERPINNING
SOFT SKILLS
CAPABILITIES
PROBLEM-SOLVING,
COMMUNICATION, ETC
QUALITIES
EMPATHY, VERSATILITY, ETC
EXPERTISE
IT, MUSIC, ETC
Figure 12: Conceptual Framework for Skills in the 21st Century, S. Whittemore 2017
How and where do we learn and recognise these core competencies?
41
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Benefits of core transversal
competencies and costs
of not developing them
The more highly developed our transversal skills are, the more highly-evolved humans we
become, when we are equipped to deploy our advanced cognitive and technical skills with
the fabric of well-honed transversal competencies. As the conceptual framework above
shows, transversal skills are the foundation, the bedrock for the considered and eective
application of any cognitive or technical knowledge or skill. When cognitive or techni-
cal knowledge or skills are deployed without key transversal competencies, the results can
range from ineective (e.g. didactic one-way teaching to learners expecting engagement) to
extremely damaging (e.g. socio-economic impact of partisan political use and manipulation
of personal data).
A well-functioning society depends on the eective integrated application of transversal
competencies.
While it is dicult to translate their economic impact into
quantitative or financial terms, a 2015 UK study concluded
that soft skills are worth £88 billion1 to the UK economy
alone.
This figure is projected to rise as intelligent machines take over many repetitive tasks and
as service and experience industries increase further their market dominance in the Fourth
Industrial Revolution.
Transversal qualities are the basis for values, for a more inclusive society, for less bigotry,
racism and discrimination, and for dealing with problems like immigration and demographic
change, not only in narrow economic terms, but also in social and ethical terms, and with a
systemic perspective, with a big picture view.
Transversal competencies are not just about the future, but also about the here and now.
They are as relevant for older people as they are for young people. It is not good enough to
create exciting new initiatives just to train young people when society’s opportunities, prob-
lems, resistance to change, and stifled ideas are manifest in older people too. In countries
undergoing major demographic change because the birth rate is low or declining (eg Italy
and Germany), in contrast to the burgeoning youth in Africa and parts of Asia, it is even more
vital to empower, educate and upskill older people too, harnessing their experience, so they
can contribute to positive change, and can compete in the global economy.
1 https://www.cips.org/en/Supply-Management/News/2015/January/Soft-skills-worth-88-billion-to-UK-
economy/
Transversal competencies essential for future proofing the workforce
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How and where do we learn
and recognise these core
competencies?
How can we encourage and empower people in work and life to develop soft skills and
transversal qualities? How do we help them develop the autonomy and independent think-
ing through self-directed learning that is essential for negotiating the globalised digital soci-
ety and economy? Many of the International Organisations focus their attention on the in-
culcation of transversal competencies in children and young people as part of the education
process (P21 Group, World Economic Forum), but the reality is that it is equally important
that people of all ages continue to develop their transversal competencies, qualities and
capabilities.
We have seen throughout this analysis how the same transversal competencies being called
for within the education process are also the key dierentiators in personal and organisation-
al work contexts. Therefore, the sorts of approaches the WEF recommends in the diagram
below – such as game-playing, fostering and nurturing relationships, feeding curiosity
and allowing discovery, breaking learning into smaller, bite-sized pieces (given our busy
lives and the competing demands on our time), providing challenges, developing a growth
mindset (personal growth rather than economic growth) – are all eminently applicable to
training and development with businesses and other organisations.
Critical thinking/
problem solving
Curiosity
Initiative
Social and cultural
awareness
Creativity
Communication
Adaptability
Collaboration
Persistence/grit
Leadership
COMPETENCIES
CHARACTER QUALITIES
HOW TO TEACH ALL SKILLS
• Encourage play-based learning
• Break down learning into smaller, coordinated pieces
• Create a safe environment for learning
• Develop a growth mindset
• Foster nurturing relationships
• Allow time to focus
• Foster reflective reasoning and analysis
• Offer appropriate praise
• Guide a learner's discovery of topics
• Help learners take advantage of their personality and strengths
• Provide appropriate challenges
• Offer engaged caregiving
• Provide clear learning objectives targeting explicit skills
• Use a hands-on approach
Figure 13: World Economic Forum, New Vision for Education 2016
How and where do we learn and recognise these core competencies?
43
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It is not within the scope of this paper, but assessment of transversal competencies is already
a reality (OECD, PISA and PIACC), and as soft skills are integrated into school and univer-
sity curricula, it will become increasingly important. For that purpose, a logical taxonomy
of transversal competencies is needed (as distinct from a conceptual framework). For ex-
ample a UNESCO report on Assessment of Transversal Competencies, focussing on policy
and practice in the Asia-Pacific region, provides a very useful taxonomy, dividing transversal
competencies into six areas, such as Intrapersonal Skills, Critical and Innovative thinking:
What are
transversal
competencies?
Interpersonal
skills
Intrapersonal skills
Media &
information
literacy
Other
Global citizenship
Critical & innovative
thinking
Transversal competencies or soft skills are now well recognised across the globe as essen-
tial in work and life. However, their importance has increased exponentially because of the
accelerated rate of change in society that we are experiencing today globally, in particular
the transformative and all-pervasive impact of digital technology and the internet, combined
with the eects of globalisation.
Traditional education, which focuses on knowledge, cognitive and technical skills, often
in a pedagogic model which presupposes a receptive and passive mode in the learner, has
not been able to keep pace with this multi-faceted transformation in information, com-
munication and global connectivity, so transversal competencies do not generally form
part of the core curriculum in formal education, although innovative approaches to learning1
worldwide at all levels are rapidly increasing in response to this.
Figure 14: UNESCO, Assessment of Transversal Competencies: Policy and Practice
in the Asia-Pacific Region, 2016
1 Italian universities: http://www2.crui.it/crui/magnifici_incontri_crui_2018/Tav4B%20-%20Compe-
tenze%20Crediti%20Certificazioni.pdf ; Australian schools: https://www.australiancurriculum.edu.
au/f-10-curriculum/general-capabilities/
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2 http://egdcfoundation.org/work/assets/McKinsey-Education-to-Employment-Europe.pdf
A 2014 McKinsey Report2 identified a systemic discon-
nect between the worlds of education and employment
and found that graduates are often unprepared for the de-
mands of work because, generally, traditional education
focuses on cognitive knowledge and skills.
At the 2017 web summit in Lisbon, Dr Mmantsetse Marope of UNESCO noted: “Education
systems have to be lifelong learning systems themselves. We need education systems to pro-
duce learners who can change the context for the better. But many education systems are
stuck in the 20th century – or even earlier. They are stuck in teaching the 3 ‘R’s and subjects
for their own sake”.
How do we therefore develop, inculcate, teach and learn these global competencies in a
joined up lifelong learning process? Integrating the learning of transversal competencies into
formal education only would be exclusive, especially as the world of work and professions,
is crying out for these skills, as in all spheres of life.
Can self-directed eLearning help with this challenge if we
integrate it into people’s working lives, in an enjoyable, hu-
man, manageable and engaging way?
According to the OECD, a competence is by its very nature a “multidimensional capacity” –
and this paper has demonstrated that. Multi-dimensional capacities require multidimension-
al modes of learning to develop and apply; they need multiple intelligences stimulated by
multimedia learning objects in order to exercise and evidence the dierent transversal com-
petencies in dierent ways and contexts. Given that transversal competencies are qualities
– attributes, aptitudes and attitudes – and often embedded in one’s personality, interactive
learning that involves the individual, the personality, is essential.
45
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provider in Italy, with a portfolio of multinational clients and a fast-growing presence glob-
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Skilla is becoming internationally recognised for its combination of passion, scientific preci-
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years’ experience in training management, skilla is a family company owned by the Amicucci
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At the same time, we are a ground-breaking, dynamic and modern organisation, with young,
well-qualified sta (with doctorates and masters), who have a high level of specialisation in
educational methods, course development, graphic design, instructional design, IT and pro-
ject management. To continually refresh and improve our educational content and methods,
we deploy about 150 expert consultants, 7 PhDs, active partnerships with several universities
and a Scientific Committee involving 14 Italian and international universities.
Skilla MULTIMEDIA TRAINING PILLS
Multimedia Training Pills are highly interactive bite-sized courses designed to be used in a
variety of ways - e-learning, classroom and blended - and can be accessed on multiple de-
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Our scientifically backed method stimulates dierent learning styles, challenges traditional
training approaches, empowers learners and enables positive organisational advances.
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Transversal Competencies Essential for Future Proofing the Workforce
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Simon Whittemore
July 2018
... Johannes-Kepler Universität (JKU) Linz, Institut für Wirtschaftsinformatik -Communications Engineering Somit kann wissenschaftliches Arbeiten als Transversalkompetenz betrachtet werden. Es stellt eine erlern-und nachweisbare Fähigkeit dar, die wertvoll für effektives Handeln anhand eines problembasierten und potenzialorientierten Vorgehens auch in der Erwerbsarbeit, für das Lernen oder für die allgemeines Lebensgestaltung ist (Whittemore, 2018), insbesondere wenn dieses mit PjBL verknüpft wird (Mesquita et al., 2009). Wissenschaftliches Arbeiten wird entsprechend diesen Eigenschaften der Teilkompetenz der Urteilskraft als einer der Future Skills betrachtet (Süßenbach, 2023, https://future-skills.net/). ...
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In welcher Form kann projektbasiertes Lernen unter Einsatz innovativer Technologien unterstützen, Future Skills in die Hochschullehre zu integrieren? Wir beschreiben in diesem Beitrag eine Learning Journey zu wissenschaftlichem Arbeiten, die durch eine Metaverse-Technologie unterstützt wird, und stellen damit Wissensmanagement als digitale Schlüsselkompetenz zur nachhaltigen Veränderung der Lehre zur Diskussion. Der Ansatz greift den aktuellen Übergang von herkömmlichen Web-Anwendungen in die Richtung dreidimensionaler Web-Interaktion auf. Die vorgeschlagene didaktische Gestaltung orientiert sich an einem Raumkonzept, das die Bearbeitung einer wissenschaftlichen Aufgabenstellung in projektbasierten Lernschritten strukturiert. Die in jedem Raum verfügbare Kommunikations- und Informationsinfrastruktur erlaubt neben dessen individueller Anpassung zugleich kollaboratives Arbeiten mit anderen (potenziellen) Nutzerinnen und Nutzern. Über das dargestellte Konzept hinaus enthält der Beitrag qualitative Evaluationsergebnisse zu dem entwickelten Prototyp.
... They include critical thinking, leadership, the ability to use digital information tools, problem solving and teamwork. These skills are "the foundation of personal development" and an important part of the formation of any knowledge and skills [4]. For example, for teacher psychologists, knowledge in their field is a professional skill, and speaking a foreign language, informational and digital literacy are transversal skills. ...
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Relevance. The relevance of this study is underscored by the rapidly evolving landscape of the 21st century, characterized by technological advancements, shifts in the labor market, and ongoing environmental and political changes. Purpose. The purpose of this study is to enable students to understand the importance of transversal competence. Methodology. The research methodology was based on a systematic and comprehensive approach. The questionnaire was conducted to determine how well students could understand and perceive the concept of transversal competence. Results. This article discusses the components and methods of transversal competence of students as citizens in accordance with the education system in the context of a post-industrial society. During the analysis, a questionnaire of the TRANSMOD project (2014) was used for analyzing the formation of transversal competences and transversal skills in the educational programs of the specialties �Pedagogy and Psychology� of L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University. The level of development and the importance of developing transversal competences of students in higher education system were considered. Conclusions. Based on the results of the survey, it was concluded that in the modern education system it is necessary to provide new professional disciplines aimed at developing transversal competences. In conclusion, it is obvious that teaching staff have a special place in the formation of both professional and transversal competences in the training of future specialists. Keywords: skills; digital society; questionnaire; professional disciplines; teaching staff
... Over time the concept of transversal competences has gained prominence signifying a shift towards skills that can be applied across various fields, settings, and social interactions. Despite the lack of a universally accepted definition, the common theme among non-academic skills is their transferability which equips individuals to apply them in diverse situations and circumstances and could involve both technical and non-technical competences (Whittemore, 2018;Devika et al., 2020;Nagele and Stadler, 2017). While some researchers have raised doubts about the extent of their applicability (Nagele and Stadler, 2017) most literature emphasizes their adaptability which has led to the widespread use of the term "transversal" to characterize these abilities. ...
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... Therefore, universities increasingly become a space for the implementation of solidarity and cooperation, where an individual's initiative, proactive behaviour, and responsibility for the future sustainability of society are encouraged [3,4]. Research into transversal competencies is thus gaining increasing importance, as their development in interaction with professional competencies is necessary for individuals to adapt to change successfully and live meaningful and productive lives [5]. ...
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... Research into transversal competences is thus gaining 2 increasing importance, as their development in interaction with professional competences is necessary for individuals to adapt to change successfully and live meaningful and productive lives. [5]. ...
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The development of transversal competences, in interaction with professional competences, is essential for individuals to adapt to change and live meaningful and productive lives. The aim of this study was to explore the mutual interaction of six transversal competences—civic, digital, entrepreneurial, global, innovation, and research, as well as their respective sub-competences—and propose possible approaches to how this dynamic of interaction can be applied to facilitate the development of transversal competences. A sample of students (N = 1575) from 21 universities in Latvia completed a self-assessment survey evaluating multiple behavioural indicators for each transversal competence and sub-competence. The results revealed that civic competence was evaluated significantly lower than other competences, and, for most transversal competences, sub-competences associated with active and systematic collaboration and networking received lower evaluations. A network analysis showed that the community involvement sub-competence of the civic competence and the initiative and critical thinking sub-competences of the innovation competence had the strongest links to the other measured sub-competences on average. The results suggest that the development of initiative and cooperation-and-collaboration-related and network-building skills are likely to have a systematic positive effect on the development of a wider set of transversal competences and the professional autonomy of students in the long term.
... Researchers such as Ra et al. (2021) and Trilling and Fadel (2009) highlight the role of teachers in promoting adaptability through diverse teaching strategies that encourage critical thinking, collaboration, and the ability to learn and unlearn. Educational frameworks should foster a growth mindset, preparing students not only for current challenges but also equipping them with the skills necessary to thrive amidst future uncertainties (Ryan & Tilbury, 2013;Whittemore, 2018). ...
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... Ez a két fogalom a soft skills és a transzverzális kompetenciák. Igaz, hogy értelmezésük és alkotókomponenseik nem egyértelműen tisztázottak, ahogy a két fogalom egymáshoz való viszonya sem (Eger és Grossmann, 2004;Veroszta és Nyüsti, 2015;Cornalli, 2018), de több megközelítésben és kontextusban is visszaköszön a problémamegoldó képesség (Tsankov, 2018;Whittemore, 2018). E képesség komponensei, mint például az induktív gondolkodás, széles körben kutatott (Vo és Csapó, 2020;De Koning és mtsai, 2002), de nem a felsőoktatásban. ...
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