Articles written by

Ralph Cassar

Education and Training Policy

The Maltese National Vocational Education and Training policy assumes that post-compulsory VET should be geared towards skill acquisition, to build a country’s human capital and to impart useful knowledge to students. The assumption is also that VET should target disadvantaged groups and students with different educational needs; those less academically inclined, and those at risk of dropping out of school. The constant reference to employer involvement, and of economic considerations mirror the goals set out in EU documents. Social inclusion is assumed to be achieved through investing in Human Capital. However, one aspect of the policy that could be construed as actively promoting social justice is the transformation of the main state post-compulsory vocational college, the Malta College of Arts, Science and Technology (MCAST), into a comprehensive institution, offering a seamless path from FE to HE. Hurdles to this vision are discussed, including the negative public perceptions of non-traditional paths to HE and the risk of MCAST focusing on higher-status courses, at the expense of supporting students from lower levels to ‘make the crossing’ to higher levels. The jury is also still out on whether the comprehensivisation of MCAST will spread equity and social cohesion, and strengthen society through cooperation, participation in the democratic life of a country and empower people to participate effectively in society, including, but not exclusively in the economy
34 min read

STEM Further Education – from training for employment to education for freedom

The dominant discourse used to justify the costs and need of state-funded Further Education (FE) in Malta mirrors that in European Union policy documents, which emphasise the development of human capital, the utility of FE to the individual and the assumed direct link between FE and economic growth. The emphasis, at least in policies, is on what employers want rather what students want for themselves or what educators think is educationally desirable. In this paper, I propose using the capabilities approach as a framework for reimaging FE and post-compulsory technical education as a process of freedom and empowerment. Amartya Sen describes capabilities as freedoms which involve both the processes that allow the freedom of action and making decisions, and also the opportunities that are available. He envisions successful societies as those in which its members are able to participate effectively and influence the spheres effecting their lives – socially, economically and politically. Capabilities can be enhanced by public policy. The capabilities proposed to give students the freedom to make their own choices and participate more fully in society are: practical reasoning; affiliation; informed vision; resilience; social and collective struggle; emotional reflexivity; integrity; and knowledge and skills.