Abstract

Industry 4.0 requires highly skilled, sophisticated workers and entrepreneurs, and continuous training is essen-tial for them, and its scene is increasingly shifting to higher education. For this reason, higher education peda-gogy must go through continuous innovation. In this article, we present a model experiment of VET teacher training, which consists of a so-called proactive learning method and a portfolio-based evaluation process. In the pedagogical model, the student-teacher relationship focuses on the preparation process before the classroom meeting. During proactive learning, the student prepares for the lesson using ICT systems, gets to know his / her classmates, collects and processes data. By combining his impressions, his own written works, his reflec-tions during the learning process, he creates a kind of developmental history and work description, which is the actual portfolio. Portfolio as an assessment method is an integral part of the proactive learning model. Portfolio implementation requires a proactive learning model, and in this model, portfolio is the most appropriate as-sessment method. One of the aims of our experiment is to investigate whether performance measurement in higher education pedagogy can be carried out through portfolio-type evaluation. Another aim of our experiment is to examine whether the efficiency of knowledge transfer in higher education pedagogy can be improved through a proactive learning process.

Highlights

  • Based on Eurostat, the average proportion of people with a tertiary education in the European Union (EU) was 40.3% in 2019

  • These values were calculated on the basis of Eurostat data for Member States

  • 4.1 Importance of a portfolio in VET teacher training In Hungary, the contents of this type of portfolio are detailed in the Annex to EMMI Decree 8/2013 (I.30.) on common requirements for teacher education and training and output requirements for each teaching period

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Summary

Introduction

Based on Eurostat (statistical office of the European Union situated in Luxembourg), the average proportion of people with a tertiary education in the European Union (EU) was 40.3% in 2019. The ISCED is a statistical framework for organizing information on education maintained by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). This was ten percentage points higher than for 2008. Based on our own calculations, if the values for the five years (until 2025) are adjusted by changing the 11-year average, the gap will increase to 36.2 percentage points by 2025. These values were calculated on the basis of Eurostat data for Member States (but similar dynamics can be identified on the basis of data for Member States, and even for the 19-euro area countries)

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