European Lifelong Guidance Policy Network Database, ELGPN Database

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Access to guidance

Term

Access to guidance

Definition

Conditions, circumstances or requirements (e.g. qualification, education level, special needs, gender, age etc.) governing admission to and participation in guidance activities, and/or the right to use guidance services or programmes.

Comment

Adaptation of the definition used in education and training to a guidance context. This is a restricted definition of access, which is more generally defined in a service context as:
‘the right to use a particular service’.

A key concern is that lifelong guidance policies encourage social inclusion and ‘that all citizens have a right to access guidance services at any point in their lives’ (Lifelong Guidance Policy Development: a European Resource Kit 2012).

Source

Cedefop (2008b). Terminology of European education and training policy: a selection of 100 key terms. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://europass.cedefop.europa.eu/europass/home/hornav/Glossary.csp

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ELGPN Glossary, access to guidance, access

Employability

Term

Employability

Definition

Combination of factors which enable individuals to progress towards or get into employment, stay in employment and progress during their careers. The employability of individuals depends: (a) on personal attributes (including adequacy of knowledge and skills); (b) on the way these personal attributes are presented on the labour market; (c) on the environmental and social context (incentives and opportunities offered to update and validate their knowledge and skills); and (d) on the economic context.

Comment

Employability is often a focus of lifelong guidance activities and particularly of employment counselling/guidance.

Source

Scottish Executive (2007). What is employability? Available from Internet: http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Business-Industry/Employability/definition

Tamkin, P. & Hillage, J. (1999). Employability and Employers: The missing piece of the jigsaw. Institute for Employment Studies (Report 361). Available from Internet: http://www.employment-studies.co.uk/summary/

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http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Business-Industry/Employability/definition

http://www.employment-studies.co.uk/summary/

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ELGPN Glossary, employable, employability, employment

Work experience

Term

Work experience

Definition

Knowledge, skills and competences acquired by an individual during their working life.
This term is also used to describe short periods of work-based learning (commonly carried out while the individual is participating in a related education or training programme) or working as a trainee or intern in order to gain experience of a particular occupation or type of work.

Comment

It is important to distinguish the two common meanings of this term.
See ‘Work-based learning’

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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ELGPN Glossary, competences, skills, knowledge, working life, vocational education, work, work-based learning

Work-based learning

Term

Work-based learning

Definition

Acquisition of knowledge and skills through carrying out – and reflecting on – tasks in a vocational context, usually in the workplace.

Comment

The accreditation of work-based learning is often linked to lifelong guidance activities.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, competences, work-based learning, knowledge, vocational skills

Counselling

Term

Counselling

Definition

The interaction between a professional and an individual helping them to resolve a specific problem or issue.

Comment

It involves actively listening to an individual’s story and communicating understanding, respect and empathy; clarifying goals and assisting individuals with the decision-making process. Counselling is a mutual relationship between a counsellor (a professionally trained helper) and a client (a consumer of counselling services) (UNESCO 2002).
Most counselling is conducted on a one-to-one basis but counselling may also be carried out in a group setting.

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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ELGPN Glossary, career counselling, services, counsellor

Career choice

Term

Career choice

Definition

An individual’s career intention based on their personal aptitudes, abilities, aspirations and goals, tempered by the realities of the labour market and their personal circumstances.
The process through which an individual’s career intention is developed and realised.

Comment

A career choice need not be work-based: the definition is intended to reflect the broad nature of career choices.
The term is often used to describe the process of developing a career intention as well as the outcome of that process.

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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ELGPN Glossary, career planning, career choice

School-to-work transition

Term

School-to-work transition

Definition

The process of moving from education or training to employment, covering the period in which the change takes place.

Comment

Many guidance activities are designed to support people making this transition.
Transition between education and employment (integration path, type of employment – with regard to level and status – and duration) is complex. Integration depends on many factors (gender, age, qualification, employment policy, guidance and counselling provision, etc.).
See also definition of ‘Transition’.

Source

Cedefop (2008a). European Training Thesaurus. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/3049_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, employment, transition

Quality standard

Term

Quality standard

Definition

Technical specifications which are measurable and have been drawn up by consensus and approved by an organisation with recognised and relevant expertise at regional, national or international levels. The purpose of quality standards is optimisation of input and/or output of guidance.
The standard(s) that an organisation sets for all of its key business operations and that help clarify what an organisation expects of its employees in delivering these operations or a client can expect when using the service.

Comment

Quality standards are an important feature of a service’s comprehensive quality-assurance system and criteria are the details identified to reach the set standard(s). This includes quality indicators on the evidence identified to show the service meets set criteria.
They refer to the systems and procedures developed by career practitioners and stakeholders in the career sector that:
• define the career sector, its membership and its services;
• recognise the diverse skills and knowledge of career practitioners;
• guide practitioner entry into the sector;
• provide a foundation for designing career practitioner training;
• provide quality assurance to the public and other stakeholders in the sector;
• create an agreed terminology for the sector
(adapted from [Canadian] National Steering Committee for Career Development Guidelines and Standards, 2004).
See definitions of ‘Quality assurance’, ‘Quality criteria’, ‘Quality indicators’ and ‘Quality system’.

Source

Cedefop (2003). Quality in training = La qualité dans la formation: Glossary. (Working paper / Document de travail). Available from Internet: http://libserver.cedefop.europa.eu/vetelib/eu/pub/cedefop/virtual/quality_glossary_2003.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, quality, quality assurance, specifications

Labour market information systems

Term

Labour market information systems

Definition

Systems, mechanisms or processes for gathering, organising and providing information about the state of the labour market and/or professions and jobs. This includes recording changes taking place within the labour market, employment, jobs and the professions.

Comment

Such systems often include databases linked to ICT systems and accessible via the internet. They are usually designed to be used by career counsellors and also by clients on a self-help basis.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, data base, ICT, information, labour market, system

Work practice

Term

Work practice

Definition

The opportunity to participate in work activities in order to gain experience and develop appropriate work skills and attitudes to work.

Comment

See ‘Work experience’.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, skills, work, experience

Vocational guidance

Term

Vocational guidance

Definition

Help for individuals to make choices about education, training and employment.

Comment

Sometimes used as a synonym for career guidance or guidance.
See related definitions for ‘Career counselling’, ‘Career guidance’, ‘Guidance’.

Source

Hawthorn, R. (1991). Who Offers Guidance. Sheffield: Employment Department.

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ELGPN Glossary, career counselling, career guidance, vocational, guidance

Validation of non-formal and informal learning

Term

Validation of non-formal and informal learning

Definition

A process of confirmation by an authorised body that an individual has acquired learning outcomes against a relevant standard. It consists of four distinct phases: (1) identification – through dialogue – of particular experiences made by an individual; (2) documentation – to make visible the individual experiences; (3) a formal assessment of these experiences; and (4) recognition leading to a certification, e.g. a partial or full qualification.

Comment

This term has been designed to replace ‘Accreditation of prior experiential learning’ (APEL), ‘Recognition of non-formal and informal learning’ (RNFIL) and ‘Validation of prior learning’ (VPL).
This process is often linked to specialised guidance activities. An intention is to enhance ‘the role of guidance in relation to accreditation of prior experiential learning (APEL) and to learning in the workplace including formal, non-formal and informal learning’ (Lifelong Guidance Policy Development: a European Resource Kit 2012).

Source

EU proposed definition from DG EAC.

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ELGPN Glossary, accreditation, informal, learning outcomes, non-formal, qualification, validation

Transversal skills

Term

Transversal skills

Definition

The skills individuals have which are relevant to jobs and occupations other than the ones they currently have or have recently had. These skills may also have been acquired through non-work or leisure activities or through participation in education or training.
More generally, these are skills which have been learned in one context or to master a special situation/problem and can be transferred to another context.

Comment

The term ‘transversal skills’ has largely replaced the term ‘transferable skills’.

Source

Cedefop (2008a). European Training Thesaurus. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/3049_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, competences, skills, employability, lifelong learning, skills development, work

Transition

Term

Transition

Definition

The process of moving from one education, employment or training situation to another. This would include a move out of the labour market, for example into unemployment or to look after children, and the move back into employment, education or training after a period of not being in work, education or training.

Comment

Many lifelong guidance activities are designed to support people making transitions of one kind or another.
See also definition of ‘School-to-work transition’.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, labour market, unemployment, training, education, transition

Self-service

Term

Self-service

Definition

A mode of delivery of guidance services in which it is up to the client to select the guidance services, interventions or activities s/he will use.

Comment

In some settings, this is done by the client providing information about him/herself and then being directed automatically to services that might be appropriate. This approach is particularly common where on-line guidance services are being offered as all or part of the guidance service.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, guidance, internet, provision, online, career guidance, services

Self-management of competences

Term

Self-management of competences

Definition

When an individual takes responsibility for the development of their own competences. Sometimes this might also include the individual taking responsibility for the recording or logging of their competences: for example, in a portfolio.

Comment

The ability of an individual to take responsibility for self-management of their competences is often a goal in lifelong guidance.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, competences, self-management

Self-knowledge

Term

Self-knowledge

Definition

Knowledge that an individual has about him/herself.

Comment

Developing self-knowledge/awareness is considered an important activity in career counselling: many career interventions are designed to increase self-knowledge.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, self-knowledge, self-awareness

Self-help provision

Term

Self-help provision

Definition

An approach to the provision of guidance services that depends on the client either working on their own using resources and materials designed to be used without additional support from a career counsellor, or where responsibility for choosing an appropriate form of career support is left up to the client.

Comment

Many guidance services offer self-help materials to their clients; such materials are also widely available in other settings, such as libraries, on the web, etc.
Many self-help materials can also be used in group settings with or without the involvement of a career counsellor.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, guidance, provision, services

Quantitative and qualitative evidence

Term

Quantitative and qualitative evidence

Definition

Numerical information is used to provide quantitative evidence, while qualitative evidence is based on observation and judgement and deals with meanings. Qualitative evidence is usually provided by experts or people considered by virtue of their training or work experience to be appropriately qualified to make such assessments.

Comment

For a guidance service, numerical evidence might be, for example, the number of clients using the service, their ratings of satisfaction with the service, or the number who obtained employment; while qualitative evidence might be provided by interviews with clients about their experience of using the service carried out by an independent researcher.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, evidence base, evidence

Quality system

Term

Quality system

Definition

Organisational structure, procedures, processes, and resources needed to implement quality management. The quality system provides the framework for planning, implementing, and assessing services provided and for carrying out required quality assurance and quality control.

Comment

See definitions of ‘Quality assurance’, ‘Quality criteria’, ‘Quality indicators’ and ‘Quality standard’.

Source

ISO (International Organization for Standardization), (1994). ISO 8402-1994. Quality management and quality assurance – Vocabulary. Geneva: ISO.

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ELGPN Glossary, quality, quality assurance, system, quality management

Quality indicators

Term

Quality indicators

Definition

Formally recognised figure(s) or ratio(s) used as yardsticks to judge and assess quality performance.

Comment

Quality indicators are statistical measures that give an indication of output quality. However, some quality indicators can also give an indication of process quality.
The evidence identified to show that a guidance service meets set quality criteria.
See definitions of ‘Quality assurance’, ‘Quality criteria’, ‘Quality standards’ and ‘Quality system’.

Source

Van den Berghe, W. (1996). Quality Issues and Trends in Vocational Education and Training in Europe. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://bookshop.europa.eu/en/quality-issues-and-trends-in-vocational-education-and-training-in-europe-pbHX9896647/

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ELGPN Glossary, quality, quality assurance, measures

Quality criteria

Term

Quality criteria

Definition

Independent standards for measuring the quality of guidance provision or services.

Comment

Quality criteria are the indicators used to show that a guidance service or guidance activity meets quality standards.
See definitions of ‘Quality assurance’, ‘Quality indicators, ‘Quality standards’ and ‘Quality system’.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, quality, quality assurance

Quality assurance

Term

Quality assurance

Definition

Activities involving planning, implementation, evaluation, reporting, and quality improvement, implemented to ensure that guidance activities (content of programmes, design, assessment and validation of outcomes, etc.) meet the quality requirements expected by stakeholders

Comment

Quality assurance for guidance typically involves ensuring that all staff understand what is required of them, that the necessary resources (including sufficiently trained staff) for effective delivery are available, and that performance is reviewed regularly and systematically to identify areas for improvement. A number of independently accredited quality standards (i.e. necessary training of staff) exist that have been developed to support organisational quality assurance.
See also ‘Quality system’.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, quality, quality assurance system

Profiling

Term

Profiling

Definition

The process of collecting information about a person to form a profile that describes him/her. This may involve collecting a standard set of information, possibly to compare people, or the construction of a one-off description of a person.
A similar approach is also commonly used to profile jobs or occupations and a job or occupational profile may be included in a career information system to make it easier to make comparisons between jobs and occupations.

Comment

Both the profiling of people and the profiling of jobs/occupations are common activities in guidance.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, guidance, information

Portfolio

Term

Portfolio

Definition

A portfolio is designed to be a record of the competences (skills, knowledge and abilities) and experiences of an individual. It may list formal qualifications or include examples of work as well as recording training courses, work experience and non-work activities undertaken by the individual.

Comment

The development of portfolios is an increasingly common career education activity in schools and universities.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, competences, skills, knowledge, qualifications, work, record

Personal action planning

Term

Personal action planning

Definition

The process of mapping out the necessary steps that an individual needs to take and the services s/he might need to use in order to achieve an identified educational, vocational or personal goal. The process might be conducted by the individual on their own, in conjunction with someone else (e.g. a career counsellor) or by using a proforma/template or online tool.

Comment

The definition has been extended to include personal goals as well as educational and vocational ones.

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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ELGPN Glossary, planning, personal goals

Performance measures/indicators

Term

Performance measures/indicators

Definition

Data, usually quantitative, that provide a measure of an individual’s, team’s or organisation’s level of attainment, against which the level of others can be compared.

Comment

A performance measure/indicator is a measure that has been selected by policy-makers, funding bodies or managers, as a way of assessing and measuring the delivery and effectiveness of a project or a service. In education, performance measures often relate to the retention, achievement and progression rates of schools and colleges. In career guidance, performance measures often relate to the number of interventions, client satisfaction level and positive destinations achieved by the guidance service.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, assessment, performance measure

Output (quality)

Term

Output (quality)

Definition

Immediate and direct tangible result of an intervention.

Comment

In the context of lifelong guidance, the term ‘output’ is commonly used to refer to a guidance provider’s volumes of delivery, its ‘turnover’, or ‘throughput’: for example, the number of interventions delivered per quarter or the number of interventions per client.
Both ‘outcome’ and ‘output’ refer to the effects or end-results that the project or service is designed to produce.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, quality, intervention, output, outcomes

Outcome (quality)

Term

Outcome (quality)

Definition

Positive or negative longer-term socio-economic change or impact that occurs directly or indirectly from an intervention’s input, activities and output.

Comment

In the context of lifelong guidance, the term ‘outcome’ is commonly used to describe the effect that a service has had, either on the individual client, or on the wider community or economy as a whole. In this sense, ‘outcome’ is really what is meant by the ‘impact’ or ‘impact measure’ of a service, i.e. the learning, social and/or economic outcomes achieved by the individual.
Both ‘outcome’ and ‘output’ refer to the effects or end-results that the project or service is designed to produce.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, impact, input, output, outcomes

Mentoring

Term

Mentoring

Definition

A developmental relationship that enhances both an individual’s growth and his/her career advancement.

Comment

Mentoring involves both career and psychosocial functions. Career functions are seen to include: sponsorship, coaching, protection, exposure and challenging work. Psychosocial functions include: role modelling, counselling, acceptance and confirmation, and friendship.
Classic mentoring usually involves a relationship between an older/more experienced person and a younger/less experienced one.

Source

Kram, K.E. (1985). Mentoring at Work: Developmental Relationships in Organizational Life. Lanham: University Press of America.

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ELGPN Glossary, career, coaching

Lifelong learning

Term

Lifelong learning

Definition

All learning activity undertaken throughout life, which results in improving knowledge, know-how, skills, competences and/or qualifications for personal, social and/or professional reasons.

Comment

Life-wide learning has been defined as learning, either formal, non-formal or informal, that takes place across the full range of life activities (personal, social or professional) and at any stage.

Source

Based on Cedefop (2004). Cedefop; Tissot, P. (2004). Terminology of vocational training policy – A multilingual glossary for an enlarged Europe. Luxembourg: Publications Office, 2004. Available from Internet: http://libserver.cedefop.eu.int/vetelib/eu/

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ELGPN Glossary, informal learning, lifelong, non-formal learning, skills, competences

Lifelong guidance

Term

Lifelong guidance

Definition

A range of activities that enables citizens of any age and at any point in their lives to identify their capacities, competences and interests, to make educational, training and occupational decisions and to manage their individual life paths in learning, work and other settings in which these capacities and competences are learned and/or used.

Comment

This is an approach to guidance which does not see it as a one-off or single point in time activity. It argues for guidance to be delivered proactively and not just at transition points and refers to guidance activity undertaken throughout life (i.e. at any lifestage) and that takes a lifelong perspective (i.e. from early in school and throughout both working and non-working life).
Life-wide guidance is a dimension of lifelong guidance just as life-wide learning is a dimension of lifelong learning. Life-wide guidance can be formal, non-formal or informal and can take place across the full range of life activities (personal, social or professional), across all sectors (education, initial training, employment and continuing training) and at any stage.

Source

Council of the European Union, (2008). Council Resolution on better integrating lifelong guidance into lifelong learning strategies. Available from Internet: http://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/educ/104236.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, guidance, lifelong

Learning outcomes of guidance

Term

Learning outcomes of guidance

Definition

The set of knowledge, skills and/or competences an individual has acquired and/or is able to demonstrate after completion of a guidance activity or through participation in the guidance process.

Comment

The proposed definition is related specifically to a guidance context and has been adapted from the more general definition of learning outcomes.
Career guidance has been shown to lead to improved learning outcomes, such as greater access to, and participation in, learning and training, improved retention rates in education and training, greater education and training attainment and higher level skills, improved motivation and hence attainment in education and training (Careers Scotland 2007).
See separate definitions of ‘Economic and social outcomes’ and ‘Guidance outcomes’.

Source

Based on Cedefop (2008b). Terminology of European education and training policy: a selection of 100 key terms. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://europass.cedefop.europa.eu/europass/home/hornav/Glossary.csp

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ELGPN Glossary, competences, skills, knowledge, learning outcome, career guidance

Key competences

Term

Key competences

Definition

The sum of skills (basic skills and new basic skills) needed to live in contemporary society. In its recommendation on key competences for lifelong learning, the European Commission sets out the eight key competences: communication in the mother tongue; communication in foreign languages; competence in maths and basic competences in science and technology; digital competence; learning to learn; social and civic competences; sense of initiative and entrepreneurship; and cultural awareness and expression.

Comment

Note that the term is also used to describe the competences required for a particular job or those competences which are seen as most critical for job performance.

Source

Cedefop (2008a). European Training Thesaurus. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/3049_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, competences, skills

Job-search training

Term

Job-search training

Definition

Training designed to help people in their search for jobs/employment.

Comment

Job-search training is often provided alongside other guidance services and can include a number of different elements, such as: information and advice on where to find out about potential jobs; help with the application process (e.g. CV writing, completing application forms); and preparation for job interviews and other elements of the selection process (e.g. taking selection tests, participating in an assessment centre).

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ELGPN Glossary, employment, guidance, job seeking, service, training

Information and communication technologies (ICT)

Term

Information and communication technologies (ICT)

Definition

Technologies which provide for the electronic input, storage, retrieval, processing, transmission and dissemination of information.

Comment

ICT-based tools are used increasingly in career guidance. For example, many career information systems rely on ICT. ICT and related technology are also used to underpin
e-guidance, distance guidance services, on-line and web guidance.
See definition for ‘e-guidance’.

Source

Cedefop; Tissot, P. (2004). Terminology of vocational training policy – A multilingual glossary for an enlarged Europe. Luxembourg: Publications Office, 2004. Available from Internet: http://libserver.cedefop.eu.int/vetelib/eu/

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ELGPN Glossary, communication, distant guidance, information, information technology, online

Indicator

Term

Indicator

Definition

Quantitative or qualitative factor or variable that provides a simple and reliable means to measure achievement, to reflect the changes connected to an intervention, or to help assess the performance of a development actor.

Comment

Developing and ageing indicators to assess the performance of both guidance activities and guidance services is an important component in the development of lifelong guidance policy.
See ‘Quality indicators’.

Source

Adapted from OECD (2010). OECD Development Co-operation Directorate (2010). Glossary of Key Terms in Evaluation and Results Based Management. Paris: OECD. Available from Internet: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/29/21/2754804.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, means, quality

Impact

Term

Impact

Definition

General term used to describe the effects of a programme, policy or socioeconomic change. Impact can be positive or negative as well as foreseen or unforeseen.

Comment

Impacts of guidance might include:
• increased job satisfaction;
• lower drop-out rates/increased tenure;
• improvements in skills related to career management;
• other social and economic benefits.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, effectiveness, impact

Guidance systems

Term

Guidance systems

Definition

The way the delivery of guidance services has been designed and organised. This might be the approach taken in a particular country or region to the organisation of guidance services or a particular way of delivering guidance, such as online or at a distance.

Comment

How the delivery of guidance services is organised can have a significant impact on their coverage and effectiveness.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, guidance services, effectiveness, design

Guidance services

Term

Guidance services

Definition

The range of services offered by a particular guidance provider. These might be services designed for different client groups or the different ways that guidance might be delivered (e.g. face-to-face, online, telephone, etc.).

Comment

Sometimes also used to refer to the range of services offered in a locality (region or country) by a number of different providers.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, design, guidance services

Guidance policy

Term

Guidance policy

Definition

Policy that determines and shapes the range and extent of guidance services that exist, their aims and principles, how the services are funded, and who is eligible to use them and under what circumstances.

Comment

Normally thought of as being government policy but many organisations, such as educational institutions, employers, charities and trade unions who offer career guidance, may also have policies that shape their services and determine who is eligible to use them.

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ELGPN Glossary, eligibility, guidance, policy, services

Guidance outcomes

Term

Guidance outcomes

Definition

Guidance has economic, social and learning outcomes and these reflect both its personal impact and the wider societal benefits.

Comment

See separate definitions of ‘Economic and social outcomes of guidance’ and ‘Learning outcomes of guidance’, and also the definition of ‘Outcome (quality)’.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, guidance, impact, learning outcome

Guidance counsellor

Term

Guidance counsellor

Definition

A trained individual delivering guidance as defined above.
Guidance counsellors assist people to explore, pursue and attain their career goals.

Comment

Synonym for career adviser and career counsellor.

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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ELGPN Glossary, career, career adviser, career counselling, career guidance, career counsellor, practitioner, individual

Guidance

Term

Guidance

Definition

Help for individuals to make choices about education, training and employment.

Comment

Career or vocational guidance is often just called guidance by practitioners. Guidance is in fact an umbrella that encompasses counselling as well as activities such as informing, coaching, teaching, assessment and advocacy.
See earlier comments under ‘Career guidance’.
Sometimes used as a synonym for career guidance or vocational guidance.

Source

Hawthorn, R. (1991). Who Offers Guidance. Sheffield: Employment Department.

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ELGPN Glossary, career choice, career guidance, coaching, vocational guidance, career counselling, services, guidance

Flexicurity

Term

Flexicurity

Definition

An integrated strategy for enhancing, at the same time, flexibility and security in the labour market. Flexicurity attempts to reconcile employers' need for a flexible workforce with workers' need for security – confidence that they will not face long periods of unemployment.

Comment

The European Commission in its Employment in Europe 2006 report describes flexicurity as an optimal balance between labour market flexibility and security for employees against labour market risks. The Commission’s interpretation of flexicurity involves replacing the notion of job security, a principle that dominated employment relations until recently, with that of ‘protection of people’. The flexicurity model, first implemented in Denmark by the social democratic Prime Minister Poul Nyrup Rasmussen in the 1990s, is a combination of easy hiring and firing (flexibility for employers) and high benefits for the unemployed (security for the employees). Perceived as a new way of viewing flexibility, flexicurity represents a means whereby employees and companies can better adapt to insecurities associated with global markets.
The EU has identified a set of common flexicurity principles and is exploring how countries can implement them through four components:
• flexible and reliable contractual arrangements;
• comprehensive lifelong learning strategies;
• effective active labour market policies;
• modern social security systems.
See Sutlana (2011) for a discussion of the implications for lifelong guidance of the concept of Flexicurity.

Source

European Commission: European Employment Strategy: What is flexicurity? Available from Internet: http://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?catId=102&langId=en

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ELGPN Glossary, flexibility, labour force, labour market, policy, security, social security

Evidence-based policy and practice

Term

Evidence-based policy and practice

Definition

The conscientious, explicit and judicious use of current evidence of what works best, and most cost-effectively, to inform lifelong guidance policy and practice.
More generally, any activity, intervention or way of working that has been designed on the basis of evidence that demonstrates the effectiveness of the particular approach (policy or practice) being used.

Comment

An example of using of an evidence-based policy would be where data on lifelong guidance service usage and potential demand are collected systematically at national level to develop evidence-based policies to target provision for different groups.
Although different, it can be seen as an adjunct to reflective practice.

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ELGPN Glossary, evidence base, evidence-based, policy, practice, effectiveness

Evidence

Term

Evidence

Definition

The information presented to support a finding or conclusion. Evidence should be sufficient, competent and relevant: there are four types of evidence: observations (obtained through direct observation of people or events); documentary (obtained from written information); analytical (based on computations and comparisons); and self-reported (obtained through, for example, surveys).

Comment

Evidence can come in a variety of forms provided by a variety of research methods, and can be of varying strength or robustness. The strength or robustness of evidence depends upon the qualitative or quantitative approach used. Social, economic and management indicators can constitute an appropriate evidence base, if they adequately reflect the relation of guidance provision to specific outcomes (i.e. retention rate in education or employment) by, for example, connecting to performance measures and indicators.

Source

United Nations, Monitoring, Evaluation and Consulting Division (MECD). Glossary. Available from Internet: http://www.un.org/Depts/oios/mecd/mecd_glossary/index.htm

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ELGPN Glossary, evidence base, information, method, research

Entrepreneurship guidance

Term

Entrepreneurship guidance

Definition

Guidance activities designed to assist individuals in reviewing their suitability for setting up a new business venture or embarking on self-employment, and to promote proactivity, entrepreneurship and a sense of autonomy.

Comment

Guidance may facilitate linkages between job providers, entrepreneurs, and innovation.
Being entrepreneurial can be relevant in a wide range of situations and not just in setting up a new business or when someone becomes self-employed.

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ELGPN Glossary, entrepreneurship, guidance, self-employment

Empowerment

Term

Empowerment

Definition

The process of enabling and encouraging people to take greater responsibility for the control of their own lives and careers by developing greater confidence in their own capabilities.

Comment

Guidance aims to empower people by assisting them to become competent at planning and managing their learning and career paths and in making career transitions.
Empowerment is about enabling individuals to take charge and make full use of their knowledge, energies and judgment.
A term that can be applied to both individuals and communities.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, life management, self-confidence

Employment counselling/guidance

Term

Employment counselling/guidance

Definition

Counselling or guidance that addresses one or more of the following domains: career/ occupational decision-making, skill enhancement, job search and employment maintenance. Activities include assessment, development and implementation of an action plan, follow-up and evaluation.

Comment

The outcome of employment counselling is to help clients improve their employability and self-sufficiency in the labour market.

Source

Canada Career Information Partnership (2006). A Career Development Resource for Parents. Available from Internet: http://www.ccdf.ca/ccdf/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/a_career_development_resource_for_parents_e.pdf

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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ELGPN Glossary, employability, employment, guidance, counselling, decision-making

Effectiveness

Term

Effectiveness

Definition

Extent to which the objectives of a policy or an intervention are achieved, usually without reference to costs.

Comment

Important to distinguish from efficiency which can generally be defined as referring to the relationship between results achieved (output) and resources used (input).
In a guidance context, it is important to distinguish between effectiveness for the individual and for the organisation (e.g. employer, guidance provider) providing the service. Effectiveness can also be measured at a societal level.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, effectiveness, efficiency, output, input

e-guidance

Term

e-guidance

Definition

Counselling or guidance that is delivered using ICT and which may or may not directly involve a guidance counsellor. Frequently used to describe the provision of information or the use of self-assessment tools and exercises via the internet.

Comment

e-guidance covers the provision of guidance activities and services using all forms of ICT, including:

Online Guidance
Guidance provided via ICT, for example using a computer or similar electronic device (e.g. a mobile telephone). May include interaction with a guidance professional via email, webchat, sms or social media (e.g. Facebook). Frequently used to describe the provision of information or the use of self-assessment tools and exercises via the internet.

Telephone guidance
The provision of guidance services via the telephone. It may involve a telephone conversation with a guidance worker or, less frequently, the delivery of pre-recorded information. Similar services are now also provided by webchat, sms or via the internet.

Web guidance
Guidance activities provided via the internet using ICT. This may include the provision of information, the use of self-help materials and tools, as well as more interactive activities, such as participation in forums or discussion groups, and email or web-based discussion with a guidance worker.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, guidance, internet, ICT, online, career guidance, counsellor, social media

Educational counselling/guidance

Term

Educational counselling/guidance

Definition

Helping an individual to reflect on personal educational issues and experiences and to make appropriate educational choices.

Comment

Sometimes used to describe a broader range of activities: for example, advising pupils or students on their educational progress, on career opportunities, or on personal difficulties or anxieties (UNESCO).

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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ELGPN Glossary, education, guidance, counselling, choice

Economic and social outcomes of guidance

Term

Economic and social outcomes of guidance

Definition

Guidance has social and economic outcomes: in particular, improving the efficiency and effectiveness of education, training and the labour market through its contribution to reducing drop-out, preventing skill mismatches, increasing job tenure and boosting productivity; and also addressing social equity and social inclusion.

Comment

Economic and social outcomes are usually considered together as the two outcomes are closely linked.
See separate definitions of ‘Guidance outcomes’, ‘Learning outcomes of guidance’ and the definition of ‘Outcome (quality)’.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, guidance, outcomes, mismatch, social inclusion, quality

Early school-leaver

Term

Early school-leaver

Definition

Early school-leavers are individuals below the statutory school-leaving age who have withdrawn from or left an education or training programme without completing it.

Comment

In an EU context this term has a specific technical meaning. The early school-leaving rate is defined by the proportion of the population aged 18-24 with only lower secondary education or less and no longer in education or training. Early school-leavers are therefore those who have only achieved pre-primary, primary, lower secondary or a short upper secondary education of less than 2 years (ISCED 0, 1, 2 or 3c short), and include those who have only a pre-vocational or vocational education which did not lead to an upper secondary certification.
Early school-leaver needs to be distinguished from drop-out which is a more general term.

Source

EU Council Recommendation on Early School Leaving (2011). Official Journal of the European Union. Available from Internet: http://ec.europa.eu/education/school-education/doc/earlyrec_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, drop-out, early school leaving, young people

Career centre

Term

Career centre

Definition

A place where people go to receive career guidance.

Comment

A career centre may offer a range of different services or interventions and these may range from self-help materials (e.g. books, information sources or access to ICT-based career support) to one-to-one support from a career counsellor.
It is also possible to envisage a virtual career centre – i.e. an online career portal – being considered as a particular type of career centre.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, career, services, career guidance, intervention, career counsellor, career centre

Drop-out

Term

Drop-out

Definition

A drop-out is anyone who has withdrawn from an education or training programme without completing it.

Comment

Drop-out is a more general term and should be distinguished from ‘early school leaver’ which has a specific meaning in an EU context. See separate definition.

Source

Cedefop (2008a). European Training Thesaurus. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/3049_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, early school leaving, drop-out

Distance guidance services

Term

Distance guidance services

Definition

Guidance services that are provided remotely, for example by telephone, email or via the internet. The key feature is that the client and guidance worker are not in face-to-face contact and, in the case of automated internet guidance, no guidance worker is directly involved in the delivery of the guidance service.

Comment

Often delivered using ICT.
See definitions for ‘e-guidance’ and ‘ICT’.

Source

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ELGPN Glossary, distance, guidance, ICT, internet, services, e-guidance

Cost-benefit analysis

Term

Cost-benefit analysis

Definition

Comparative analysis of the costs and benefits of a guidance service or particular guidance activity – and of the value of that service or activity – to select the most financially beneficial solution.

Comment

Cost-benefit analysis is one way of assessing and measuring the cost benefits and social returns on investment of differing types of careers interventions.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, cost-effectiveness, cost-impact, finance, guidance, services

Co-ordination mechanisms

Term

Co-ordination mechanisms

Definition

Processes, systems or organisational structures used to facilitate people or organisations co-ordinating their work or interventions together.

Comment

Co-ordination of lifelong guidance activities is likely to require a co-ordinating structure, with operational powers and funding (and possibly a contract or legal mandate). The establishment of national fora is one way that has been used to encourage co-ordination of lifelong guidance activities.
It could also involve the sharing of responsibility for different activities in a programme of careers work.

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ELGPN Glossary, co-ordination, process, system, lifelong, guidance

Co-operation mechanisms

Term

Co-operation mechanisms

Definition

Processes, systems or organisational structures used to facilitate people or organisations working together.

Comment

Lifelong guidance requires co-operation between partners, within existing structures. This might be largely informal in nature, or based on a co-operation agreement with decision-making powers being retained by each partner.
Co-operation mechanisms could cover a variety of settings, e.g. between different levels in education/training, across national boundaries, or between education and the labour market. They could also cover co-operation between individuals working in different settings or between the organisations they work for.

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ELGPN Glossary, co-operation, process, system, decision-making

Common quality-assurance framework

Term

Common quality-assurance framework

Definition

Set of common principles, guidelines, criteria and tools adopted by a group at a local, regional, national or international level in order to develop and assure quality in guidance delivery and in relation to the qualification of guidance practitioners.

Comment

A more general definition would be a set of common principles, guidelines, criteria and tools adopted by a group at a local, regional, national or international level for the quality assurance of services.

Source

Cedefop (2011). Glossary: Quality in education and training. Luxembourg: Publications Office. Available from Internet: http://www.cedefop.europa.eu/EN/Files/4106_en.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, quality, quality assurance, guidance, practitioner

Coaching

Term

Coaching

Definition

A process designed to focus on skill development and behaviour change to deliver improved performance. Coaching is usually delivered one-to-one.

Comment

Some careers professionals have labelled the work they do as ‘career coaching’ or as ‘career/life coaching’.
Much coaching aims to improve the performance and leadership skills of managers, and coaches are often brought into an organisation from outside. However, some employers are starting to emphasise the coaching role of managers in relation to the employees that work for them, contrasting this to other roles that managers have as leaders, managers and mentors.
Coaching is both performance-focused (which means that it is concerned with helping individuals perform tasks to the best of their abilities) and also person-centred (which means that it is the individuals being coached who are seen as having the important insights) (Somers, 2012).
Other definitions include:
• Coaching is unlocking a person’s potential to maximise their own performance; helping them to learn rather than teaching them (Gallwey, 1974).
• A collaborative solution-focused, results-orientated and systematic process in which the coach facilitates the enhancement of work performance, life experience, self-directed learning and personal growth of the coachee (Greene & Grant, 2003).

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ELGPN Glossary, coaching, skills, mentor, work performance, self-directed learning

Case management

Term

Case management

Definition

A collaborative process which assesses, plans, implements, co-ordinates, monitors and evaluates the options and services required to meet an individual’s health, social care, educational and employment needs, using communication and available resources to promote quality cost-effective outcomes.

Comment

A term originally used to refer to the management of health needs of individuals and families.
Individual case management lies at the heart of preventive strategies to reduce unemployment. This is achieved by identifying appropriate tailor-made intervention measures and by determining the targeted assistance needs of each respective client.

Source

Case Management Society, UK. Definition of case management. Available from Internet: http://www.cmsuk.org/content.aspx?content=4

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ELGPN Glossary, management, services, needs, cost-effective, preventive, unemployment, intervention

Career management skills

Term

Career management skills

Definition

A range of competences which provide structured ways for individuals (and groups) to gather, analyse, synthesise and organise self, educational and occupational information, as well as the skills to make and implement decisions and transitions.

Comment

Career management skills are the life, learning, training and employment skills which people need to develop and manage their careers effectively.

Source

European Lifelong Guidance Policy Network (2010). Lifelong Guidance Policies: Work in Progress. A report on the work of the European Lifelong Guidance Policy Network 2008–10.

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ELGPN Glossary, career, management, skills, competences, decision-making, transition

Career management

Term

Career management

Definition

An ongoing process of preparing, implementing, and monitoring career plans.

Comment

Sometimes career management is carried out by the individual on their own; but in some situations career management involves others, such as an individual’s employer, working together with the individual.

Source

Storey, W.D. (1976). Career Dimensions I, II, III, and IV. Croton on Hudson, New York: General Electric Company. Cited in Hall, D.T. & Associates (1986). Career Development in Organizations. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

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ELGPN Glossary, career, management, planning, skills, development

Career guidance

Term

Career guidance

Definition

A range of activities that enable citizens of any age, and at any point in their lives, to identify their capacities, competences and interests; to make meaningful educational, training and occupational decisions; and to manage their individual life paths in learning, work and other settings in which these capacities and competences are learned and/or used.

Comment

Career guidance is defined in the same way as lifelong guidance.
Guidance is provided in a range of settings: education, training, employment, community, and private.
Career or vocational guidance is often just called guidance by practitioners. Guidance is in fact an umbrella that encompasses counselling as well as activities such as informing, coaching, teaching, assessment and advocacy.
It is treated as a synonym of guidance and vocational guidance. Educational guidance, however, has been treated as a more specific term.

Source

Council of the European Union, (2008). Council Resolution on better integrating lifelong guidance into lifelong learning strategies. Available from Internet: http://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/educ/104236.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, career guidance, guidance, career, competences, decision-making, life path, vocational, practitioners, counselling, coaching

Career education

Term

Career education

Definition

Programmes and activities of learning to help people to develop the skills necessary to manage their career and life pathway. These include accessing and making effective use of career information and guidance.

Comment

Other definitions include:
• The systematic cooperation of educational institutions, parents and society in assisting young people and adults to acquire knowledge and skills that will enable them to make rational vocational decisions (Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary).
• The development of knowledge, skills and attitudes through a planned programme of learning experiences in education and training settings which will assist students to make informed decisions about their study and/or work options and enable effective participation in working life (Australian Ministerial Council for Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs, 1998).

Source

Institute of Career Guidance: Careers Education Committee. Available from Internet: http://www.icg-uk.org/careerseducationcommittee.html

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ELGPN Glossary, career, education, life pathway, guidance, young people, adults, vocational, skills, knowledge, decision-making

Career development

Term

Career development

Definition

The lifelong process of managing learning, work, leisure and transitions in order to move towards a personally determined and evolving future.

Comment

Career development is also used to describe the outcome of this process.
Other definitions include:
• The total constellation of economic, sociological, psychological, educational, physical and chance factors that combine to shape one’s career (Sears, 1982).
• The continuous planning carried out to advance a person's career based on experience and on any training undertaken to upgrade qualifications or to acquire new ones (UNESCO).

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

Canadian Career Development Foundation (2002). Career Development: A Primer and a Glossary.

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ELGPN Glossary, process, management, transition, career, planning, development

Career decision-making

Term

Career decision-making

Definition

The process of making a choice between particular career alternatives.

Comment

This definition does not set out to describe the nature of the process (e.g. rational, logical, etc) by which a career decision has been made or what aspects (e.g. individual, job characteristics, etc) have been considered. An alternative definition of career decision that emphasises these elements is:
• The choice of a particular option as the result of a logical series of steps used to identify and match individual aims and organisational development/labour market needs (Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary).

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ELGPN Glossary, career, choice, decision-making

Career counsellor

Term

Career counsellor

Definition

Career counsellors assist people to explore, pursue and attain their career goals.

Comment

Career advisers/counsellors have normally received professional training and possess a recognised professional qualification.
Other definitions include:
• A professional trained in career guidance that is able to assist others to make rational career choices (Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary).
• A career counsellor provides counselling in educational, career and personal domains. A career counsellor assists individuals to achieve greater self-awareness, develop a life/work direction, increase understanding of learning and work opportunities and become self-directed in managing learning, work and transitions (Canada Career Information Partnership, 2006).
Synonym for career adviser and guidance counsellor.

Source

UNESCO (2002). Handbook of Career Counselling. Available from Internet: http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001257/125740e.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, counsellor, career, guidance, career choice, self-awareness, opportunity, transition

Career counselling

Term

Career counselling

Definition

The interaction between a career/guidance counsellor and an individual.
An individual or group process which emphasises self-awareness and understanding, and facilitates the development of a satisfying and meaningful life/work direction as a basis to guide learning, work and transition decisions, as well as how to manage responses to changing work and learning environments over the lifespan.

Comment

Other definitions include:
• Career counselling facilitates the learning of skills, interests, beliefs, values, work habits, and personal qualities to enable each participant to create a satisfying life in a constantly changing work environment (Krumboltz & Worthington, 1999).
• The career counselling process is focussed on helping individuals not to choose a career but to construct it (Watts, 2000).

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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http://www.ccdf.ca/ccdf/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/a_career_development_resource_for_parents_e.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, career, counselling, counsellor, self-awareness, transition

Career information systems

Term

Career information systems

Definition

Systems, often computer-based or online but also in print, designed to aid an individual or a group in their choice of career, employment, occupation or work by gathering together, organising and providing information about specific occupations, professions or organisations including descriptions of pay, conditions, training, qualifications and experience required.

Comment

A career information system also comprises the databases that are used as sources of information.

Source

Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary. Result of Leonardo da Vinci programme project “Overcoming Intercultural and Linguistic Barriers in Continuously Accessible Vocational Guidance and Counselling” (project No LT/03/B/F/LA-171023). Available from Internet: http://glossary.ambernet.lt/main.php?lang=eng#

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ELGPN Glossary, career, career information, data base, online, choice, system

Career adviser

Term

Career adviser

Definition

Career advisers assist people to explore, pursue and attain their career goals.

Comment

Career advisers/counsellors have normally received professional training and possess a recognised professional qualification.
Synonym for career counsellor and guidance counsellor.

Source

UNESCO (2002). Available from Internet: http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001257/125740e.pdf

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http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001257/125740e.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, career, career guidance counsellor

Career

Term

Career

Definition

The interaction of work roles and other life roles over a person’s lifespan, including how they balance paid and unpaid work, and their involvement in learning and education.

Comment

The main issue is whether a definition focuses exclusively employment; employment and training; or adopts the broadest of all conceptions to include non-work activities.
There are a large number of definitions of ‘career’ in the academic literature. For example:
• the evolving sequence of a person's work experience over time (Arthur et al., 1989);
• a career is the sequence of employment-related positions, roles, activities and experiences encountered by a person (Arnold, 1997);
• career is viewed broadly to stress life roles and lifestyles, occupation being considered only one part of career (Hansen & Gysbers, 1975);
• the individual’s lifelong progression in learning and work (Watts, 1998).
Other definitions include:
The sequence of various socially significant human roles deriving from an individual’s work, learning, self-expression and leisure activities and spanning the individual’s working life, work locations, positions and achievements. (Career Guidance and Counselling Glossary, undated).
A career is the sequence and variety of occupations (paid and unpaid) which one undertakes throughout a lifetime. More broadly, 'career ' includes life roles, leisure activities, learning and work (University of Sydney Careers Centre Glossary of Career Terms, undated).
Career is a lifestyle concept that involves the sequence of work, learning and leisure activities in which one engages throughout a lifetime. Careers are unique to each person and are dynamic, unfolding throughout life. Careers include how persons balance their paid and unpaid work and personal life roles (Canadian Career Development Foundation, 2002).

Source

UNESCO (2002). Handbook of Career Counselling. Available from Internet: http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001257/125740e.pdf

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http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001257/125740e.pdf

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ELGPN Glossary, career