Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Skill Formation
- 1 Skill Formation: Interdisciplinary and Cross-National Perspectives
- PART ONE CROSS-NATIONAL DIVERSITY IN SKILL FORMATION REGIMES: ORIGINS, CHANGES, AND INSTITUTIONAL VARIATION
- PART TWO THE ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY OF SKILL FORMATION: ACCESS, INVESTMENTS, AND RETURNS TO TRAINING
- 4 Why Does the German Apprenticeship System Work?
- 5 What Do We Know About Training at Work?
- 6 Qualifications and the Returns to Training Across the Life Course
- 7 Lack of Training: Employment Opportunities for Low-Skilled Persons from a Sociological and Microeconomic Perspective
- PART THREE INDIVIDUALS' ACQUISITION OF SKILLS AND COMPETENCIES: LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS AND MEASUREMENTS OF SKILLS
- Index
- References
6 - Qualifications and the Returns to Training Across the Life Course
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Skill Formation
- 1 Skill Formation: Interdisciplinary and Cross-National Perspectives
- PART ONE CROSS-NATIONAL DIVERSITY IN SKILL FORMATION REGIMES: ORIGINS, CHANGES, AND INSTITUTIONAL VARIATION
- PART TWO THE ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY OF SKILL FORMATION: ACCESS, INVESTMENTS, AND RETURNS TO TRAINING
- 4 Why Does the German Apprenticeship System Work?
- 5 What Do We Know About Training at Work?
- 6 Qualifications and the Returns to Training Across the Life Course
- 7 Lack of Training: Employment Opportunities for Low-Skilled Persons from a Sociological and Microeconomic Perspective
- PART THREE INDIVIDUALS' ACQUISITION OF SKILLS AND COMPETENCIES: LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS AND MEASUREMENTS OF SKILLS
- Index
- References
Summary
SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE ON SKILLS AND QUALIFICATIONS
There are many ways in which the process of skill formation can be socially organized; this process differs substantially even in advanced economies at similar levels of technological development. Many abilities and skills necessary and useful for life are learned from early childhood onward in daily interaction with parents, other adults, and peers, or through the exposition to and use of communication media. In this chapter, however, we are mainly interested in the formation of abilities and skills required to perform work tasks in jobs, and we examine the returns of qualifications in work contexts.
Whereas in psychology and education science, skills and competences are often understood as specific cognitive or other capabilities of individuals to solve particular problems and/or perform particular tasks, sociology usually has a much broader understanding of them. The sociologist's understanding is probably best captured in the concept of qualification. The latter refers to sets of skills needed to perform more or less homogeneous sets of tasks, for instance, for a particular job or profession. In most research, the conceptualization of qualifications and their measurement then refers to the successful completion of particular programs in institutions of (general) education and vocational training in a society. Thus, the sociological understanding of skills or competences in the sense of qualifications is to a large degree institutionally shaped and socially and culturally constructed.
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- Information
- Skill FormationInterdisciplinary and Cross-National Perspectives, pp. 126 - 172Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
References
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