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Icardi, Rossella – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2019
Existing evidence shows that the higher the level of education the higher the likelihood to participate in workplace training. However, we know little about training participation of individuals educated to the secondary level, and whether this may vary by the type of qualification attained, i.e. vocational or general. Vocational qualification…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Workplace Learning, On the Job Training
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Gorlitz, Katja – Economics of Education Review, 2011
Using German linked employer-employee data, this paper investigates the short-term impact of on-the-job training on wages. The applied estimation approach was first introduced by Leuven and Oosterbeek (2008). Wages of employees who intended to participate in training but did not do so because of a random event are compared to wages of training…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economics, Wages, On the Job Training
Saboga, Ana Rute – European Journal of Vocational Training, 2008
This article presents the results of research into how young trainees in the level III apprenticeship system formulate their educational and professional plans, what expectations they have of obtaining socially and professionally recognised qualifications, and in what way enterprises see such training as a strategy for providing human resources…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Foreign Countries, Human Resources, Vocational Education
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Foreman-Peck, James – Policy Futures in Education, 2004
A distinctive feature of the British approach until the 1960s was that vocational education and training (VET) should be provided by employers. This is conventionally contrasted with the much more formal state coordinated approach of Germany. The question posed is whether the British style was the "spontaneous order" that results because…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Vocational Education, Educational History, Apprenticeships