Why quality matters A framework for thinking about quality in career guidance Professor Tristram Hooley Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences Presentation in Oslo 06/03/2018
Implementation A vision of practice Theory Actual practice Evidence Policy Actual practice Implementation Quality Image of an ornate carved stone bridge, Yellow Mountains, China, spanning a narrow gap between two vertical rock faces used under creative commons from http://photoeverywhere.co.uk/east/china/slides/natural_wonders_china01815.htm
What can be quality assured? “Domains of quality” Policy Organisations Process People Output or outcome Consumption
What is quality?
Different approaches to quality “Quality in a product or service is not what the supplier puts in. It is what the customer gets out and is willing to pay for.” Peter Drucker The International Organization for Standardisation (ISO) quality standard focuses on the process and the organisation that runs the process. Six Sigma focus on the output and the minimisation of errors.
Advisory Regulatory Organic Competitive Change driver Local Systemic Change driver Local Systemic Degree of provider professional autonomy Low Advisory Regulatory High Organic Competitive
Regulatory (typical features) Legal requirements and formal standards Inspection regimes Practitioner registration (incorporating qualification requirements) Regulations about facilities Regulations around outputs (for example, a requirement that a school or career guidance facility must provide a certain number of individual counselling sessions per year).
Advisory (typical features) Models, benchmarks and exemplars of good practice Provision of support for providers and professionals Driven by moral rather than legal pressure
Organic (typical features) Quality is defined by the provider and the professional. Driven by professional values and the desire to do a good job. Mechanisms include quality circles, supervisory arrangements, peer observation and mentoring, professional networks and local self-evaluation. Involvement of users as co-producers.
Competitive (typical features) Quality driven by customer responses to information on outcomes Consumer feedback League tables Outcome focused Payment by results
Critical perspectives on quality If quality is defined at least in part as fitness for purpose, then it must be asked, ‘Whose purpose or purposes?’ Limited evidence base of on efficacy Distortion and perverse incentives Is it possible to quality assure something with the complexity of career guidance
The example of England
The Careers Strategy
Good career guidance Summarises existing evidence and frames them as eight benchmarks. Presents it in a way that can be understood by policy makers and acted on by school leaders. Has achieved wide support amongst policy actors and practitioners alike. The influential 2014 report
The Gatsby Benchmarks 1. A stable careers programme 2. Learning from career and labour market information 3. Addressing the needs of each pupil 4. Linking curriculum learning and careers 5. Encounters with employers and employees 6. Experiences of workplaces 7. Encounters with further and higher education 8. Personal guidance
COMPASS (www.compass-careers.org.uk)
The quality approach in English schools Statutory guidance Gatsby Benchmarks Supported by Compass Destinations data Quality in Careers Standard CDI curriculum Professional standards & register of practice Careers leadership Local co-ordination Regulatory Advisory Competitive Regulatory Advisory Advisory Regulatory Organic Outcome Organisations Process People Organisations Process People Process
References Department for Education. (2017). Careers Strategy: Making the Most of Everyone’s Skills and Talents. London: Department for Education. Drucker, P. (2015). Innovation and entrepreneurship. Abingdon, Oxfordshire: Routledge. Gatsby Charitable Foundation. (2014). Good Career Guidance. London: Gatsby Charitable Foundation. Hooley, T. and Rice, S. (Forthcoming). Ensuring quality in career guidance: A critical review. British Journal of Guidance and Counselling. The Careers & Enterprise Company. (2017). State of the Nation 2017. London: The Careers & Enterprise Company.
In conclusion Quality is a contestable concept. It can mean different things to different people. Quality is complex. It can operate at many levels and in many different ways. There are also a number of dangers to watch out when you implement quality assurance approaches. The best solutions might require the interweaving of different approaches to quality (although there is also some value in simplicity).
Tristram Hooley Director of Research, The Careers & Enterprise Company /Professor of Career Education, University of Derby / Professor II, Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences Email: thooley@careersandenterprise.co.uk Twitter: @pigironjoe Blog: http://adventuresincareerdevelopment.wordpress.com