You are here:

Sprache:

 
BIBB / Startseite BWP / Current issue

Seite drucken Seite empfehlen BWP 6/2012

BWP 6/2012

Training for healthcare and nursing occupations


Health and nursing care are growing sectors of employment in Germany. Demand for qualified skilled staff is high while qualification pathways are diverse and complex. This issue sets out to present an overview of this aspect. Against the backdrop of the debate surrounding the increasing bias towards academic qualifications in the nursing care occupa-tions, it addresses qualification requirements, new tasks and occupational profiles in nursing care, as well as matters of compatibility and permeability between education and training courses in this sector.
In the editorial, President Esser of the Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training (BIBB) emphasises that restricting occupations to entrants with academic qualifications is not necessarily the answer to more demanding requirements in the world of work. He points out the opportunities of career-progression models in which initial and advanced vocational education and training are systematically interlinked. Not only do these offer differentiated options at the intermediate level of skilled worker qualifications but also open up transitions to related degree courses once the second level of upgrading training has been attained.
Other articles in the issue deal with the Referencing Report on the implementation of the German national qualifications framework (Deutscher Qualifikationsrahmen, DQR), the career preferences and prospects of young people with migrant backgrounds, the use of modular training in Hamburg, and a model for equipping skilled workers who act as work-place instructors with vocational teaching qualifications.

back

Contents of the issue BWP 6/2012

Editorial

Abstracts


Vocational education and training in figures

  • Tobias Maier
    Where to recruit – or poach – from next?
    Reserves of skilled staff for nursing care


Special focus: Training for healthcare and nursing occupations

  • Maria Zöller
    Qualification pathways in the health professions and current challenges
  • Frank Weidner; Thomas Kratz
    Future-oriented nursing and care education?
    Remarks on the further development of the nursing and care occupations
  • Anja Hall 
    Nursing and geriatric care – is there any truth to the myth about this being a drop-out and dead-end occupation?
  • Barbara Knigge-Demal; Gertrud Hundenborn
    Qualified for the future – The contribution of a sectoral qualifications framework to the geriatric care employment area
  • Agnes Dietzen; Moana Monnier; Tanja Tschöpe 
    Measuring the social skills of medical assistants
  • Iris Ludwig; Elke Steudter; Harry Hulskers
    It’s all in the mix! – Experience with the new occupational profiles for nursing care in Switzerland
  • Juliane Dieterich; Anika Skirl
    Health promotion in nursing and care
    Challenges in the implementation of new training content
  • Gitta Lampe-Kowald  
    Double-certificate vocational training for specialist health occupations
    Report on a school pilot in Bremen
  • Christin Brings
    Commercial all-rounders for dispensing chemists
    Updated training regulations for commercial employees in the pharmaceutical sector
  • Michael Knese 
    Practical instruction in nursing care occupations – one trainer for all? 


DQR in practice

  • Sabine Gummersbach-Majoroh
    German Referencing Report on implementation of the national qualifications framework
    Objectives, content and procedures 


Other themes

  • Ursula Beicht
    Career choices and chances of success for apprenticeship-place applicants with migrant backgrounds
  • Clive Hewlett
    Use of modular training: A successful model if the right conditions are in place
  • Ralf Jansen; Ulrich Blötz
    Training workplace instructors in vocational teaching


Law

  • Thomas Wollnik
    Regulated occupations – principles, forms and significance 


Supplements


BWPplus 6/2012


Tools:


Publisher: Federal Institute for Vocational Training (BIBB)
The President
Robert-Schuman-Platz 3
53175 Bonn
http://www.bibb.de

Copyright: The published contents are protected by copyright.
Articles associated with the names of certain persons do not necessarily represent the opinion of the publisher.