Work-Based Learning Algeria EN1
Work-Based Learning Algeria EN1
Work-Based Learning Algeria EN1
LEARNING IN ALGERIA
Original title: La formation en milieu professionnel en Algérie. English language translation by the Translation
Centre for the bodies of the European Union.
Report drafted for the European Training Foundation by Mongi Bedoui, expert in training and employment, April
2018
The contents of this paper are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
ETF or the EU institutions.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4
2. METHODOLOGY 11
3. MACROECONOMIC DATA 12
3.1 Political and economic data 12
3.2 Data on employment and unemployment 13
4. WORK-BASED LEARNING 17
4.1 Educational and training frameworks 17
4.2 Situation of work-based learning 23
4.3 Outlook and opportunities 33
5. RECOMMENDATIONS 39
LIST OF ACRONYMS 42
BIBLIOGRAPHY 43
Algeria had nearly 41.3 million inhabitants as at 1 January 2017, as compared with 40.4 million on
1 January 2016, with an annual population increase of 2.2% – announcement of Algeria Press
Service, based on data from National Office for Statistics (Office national des statistiques (ONS)) from
March 2017. This increase is the combined result of a rise in the number of births and a fall in the
number of deaths (ONS, 2017).
By 2025, approximately 50% of the population will be under 30 years of age (ONS, 2016). This
demographic trend towards a continually younger population, which will be accompanied by a steady
rise in the working-age population, will result in increased labour market pressure. As a result, the
problems associated with this increased demand will become increasingly complex and those trends
will continue to weigh heavily in terms of the relationship between supply and demand in the
employment market.
Annual GDP growth is less than 4%. In addition, the Algerian economy lacks diversification and
remains primarily based on hydrocarbons, despite the efforts made by the Algerian Government with
the support of its development partners 1.
As a result of the lack of labour market prospects and the gap between available skills and those
sought by employers, the labour force participation rate remains very low in Algeria at 41.8% (ONS
Labour Force Survey, 2013), despite some improvements as compared with previous years. The
unemployment rate is 10.5% (ONS, September 2016): it is 26.7% among young people aged between
15 and 24; 22.3% among men and 49.9% among women (ONS, 2016).
This situation is the result of various economic and social causes. The economic causes are mainly
related to structural weakness in the economy, in particular to export earnings, 97% of which are from
hydrocarbons, and to the preponderance of small and very small enterprises within the industrial and
production base, which account for 95% of all undertakings 2. The social causes mainly relate to the
mismatch between the supply of vocational training and the needs of the labour market, and are
reflected, in particular, by the increase in the number of unemployed persons who have never worked
(the long-term unemployed, in particular jobseekers who have never worked).
1 www.premier-ministre.gov.dz/ressources/front/files/pdf/plans-d-actions/plan-d-action-du-gouvernement-2017-
fr.pdf
2 Statement by Mr Abdelghani Mebarek, Director General for SMEs at the Ministry of Industry and Mines, March
2017.
■ pre-university pathway called ‘general and technological secondary education’ consisting of three
years of study. The Ministry of National Education is responsible for this educational provision,
which should admit, into the first year, 70% of secondary school leavers admitted to post-basic
education;
■ professional path called vocational education, comprising two cycles of two years of study. This
educational provision, placed under the authority of the Ministry of Vocational Training and
Education (ministère de la Formation et de l’Enseignement professionnels (MFEP)), should
accept, in the first year of the first cycle, 30% of secondary school leavers admitted to post-basic
education.
Work-based learning covers apprenticeship training, supervised work placements connected with
initial training, training in the context of employment programmes and continuing vocational training for
workers. Note however that these methods of training are very different in terms of approach, goals,
structure and development.
■ Work placements in the context of training courses provided at training centres. These
placements involve periods of working within an undertaking, generally in areas directly related to
the training already provided.
■ Vocational adaptation of jobseekers, within the framework of the Professional Insertion Measures
Programme (dispositif d’aide à l’insertion professionnelle (DAIP)).
■ Continuing vocational training concerns the active population (workers and jobseekers). It is
provided at public and private training centres which, in addition to their primary purpose of initial
training, implement continuing vocational training activities within the framework of multiple
agreements between the MFEP and other ministries, but also with businesses. In total, there are
more than 100 national framework agreements and over 7 500 specific local agreements. More
generally, continuing vocational training is a fast-growing market. It is provided by private and
public training establishments as well as by in-house services within undertakings. This includes
vocational training institutes, vocational training and apprenticeship centres (CFPAs), private
training centres, training bureaux which organise continuing vocational training activities in various
settings, such as hotels, intra-company centres, trade associations and, in particular, trade
bodies. In 2016, evening classes for workers were attended by 32 291 learners, and distance
learning courses by 39 740 learners (2016 Statistical Yearbook of the MFEP). This represents
11.7% of all people in vocational training.
■ Apprenticeship training, 80% of which is provided by business undertakings, and the remaining
20% is provided by vocational training and apprenticeship centres. This form of training is for
young people aged 15 to 35 and covers 20 professional sectors, 360 specialities and 5 levels of
certification. The duration of training varies from 12 to 36 months depending on the specialities
and the levels of training.
Apprenticeship training is increasingly favoured by the Algerian state and is a priority of the 2015‒19
action plan for the vocational training sector. And for good reason: an apprenticeship is the least
expensive method of training, the closest to the world of work and the most effective for the
professional integration of graduates. Supervised apprenticeships continue to gain ground
The Algerian Constitution – In the revised version of the Constitution (March 2016), Article 69 provides
that ‘the State shall work to promote learning and shall put in place policies to help create
employment’ (Constitution of the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria, 2016).
The Labour Code (2001/02) – Article 15 of the Labour Code, concerning the minimum age for the
recruitment of workers, states that under no circumstances may persons below 16 years of age be
recruited, ‘except within the framework of apprenticeship contracts drawn up in accordance with the
legislation and regulations in force’. Chapter V of the same code relates to the obligations of
employers with regard to training. Article 57 states that ‘the employer is also required under the
legislation in force to organise apprenticeship activities for practising a trade’.
Basic laws and organisation of apprenticeships – Formal apprenticeship training was introduced for
the first time by Decree No 75.31 of 29 April 1975. Following that first decree, three basic laws were
promulgated and govern apprenticeships in Algeria: Law No 81-07 of 27 June 1981, Law No 90-34 of
25 December 1990 and Law No 2000-01 of 18 January 2000.
Several other laws have made minor amendments to those basic laws. The new law for the
development of apprenticeships in Algeria, adopted in February 2018, provided for the development of
the system with better legal protection for apprentices and a strengthening of educational support for
apprenticeship schemes. That law was drafted in the context of implementing the five-year plan for the
sector (2015‒19), which has made apprenticeship training a key focus in meeting the human-resource
needs of business and facilitating the employment of graduates and their professional integration. That
law also seeks greater involvement of employers and local stakeholders in the management of
apprenticeships, the creation of a system of learning supervision and support for apprenticeships, the
extension of apprenticeships to foreign undertakings in Algeria and industrial and commercial public
undertakings operated by the National People’s Army, as well as the development of apprentices’
rights.
At the institutional level, the stakeholders and institutions involved in apprenticeship training (at the
time of writing this report) are:
■ the State: a standard apprenticeship contract is provided by the State and must be signed in
triplicate by the employer and the apprentice or his or her legal guardian;
■ employers: by law, all employers are required to provide vocational training to young people in the
form of apprenticeships;
■ apprentices: the relationship between an employer and an apprentice is governed by an
apprenticeship contract in which an employer undertakes to provide a systematic and
comprehensive vocational training service to an apprentice who, in return, undertakes to work for
the employer;
■ the team of inspectors responsible for vocational apprenticeship training provides pedagogical
assessment and supervision;
■ the institutions responsible for vocational training and apprenticeships, known as vocational
training and apprenticeship centres (centres de formation professionnelle et d’apprentissage
(CFPA));
The funds collected through the training and apprenticeship tax are managed by the FNAC (a body
under the supervision of the MFEP). That management mainly concerns the reimbursement of training
costs incurred. Executive Decree No 09-262 of 3 Ramadan 1430 (corresponding to 24 August 2009)
states that employers who have not spent an amount equal to at least ‘1% of the annual wage bill on
apprenticeship activities’ are to be liable for this tax (Articles 3 and 4).
Despite the political will to develop work-based learning and the importance of the statutory and
organisational framework governing that type of training, the following major challenges remain:
1. the significant school dropout rate and the steady decline in the quality of education demotivate
young people and do not encourage them to enter vocational training or occupational
apprenticeships;
2. the lack of a market for professional apprenticeships, the system being less responsive to the
skills needs of firms and the labour market than to the social demands of young people on
placement in undertakings (especially public undertakings). This explains the mismatch between
the two components;
The prospects for the development of work-based learning are, however, favourable and could
accompany the economic restructuring and modernisation of the various productive sectors. In this
spirit, 11 operational recommendations are set out at the end of the report.
This report analyses work-based learning policies and practices, and identifies policy options and
recommendations for future actions. Like the reports for the other two countries (Morocco and
Tunisia), it assesses the position of work-based learning in the light of Algeria’s economic and social
policy and the challenge of increasing access to vocational education, vocational training and
apprenticeships.
■ preparation of a documentary analysis concerning the studies, reports and working tools of the
various national and international institutions in the fields of employment, training,
apprenticeships, technical education and training, and at universities and in the economic and
employment spheres;
■ field visits covering a significant sample of centres and undertakings using apprenticeships and
continuing professional development as a pathway for training and developing human capital;
■ organisation of interviews with representatives of the main stakeholders involved in workplace
learning in the broad sense.
1. Documentary
2. Drawing up of an
analysis and
assessment of the
interviews concerning
outcomes and
the achievements
challenges of work-
and challenges of
based learning
work-based learning
3. Analysis of the
4. Proposal for position of
development apprenticeship in
priorities and the overall
recommendations vocational training
system
The age profile of Algeria bears witness to the youth of its population. Given the significant rate of
natural increase, this finding is likely to be confirmed in coming years. The Algerian economy lacks
diversity and remains essentially based on hydrocarbons, despite the efforts made by the Algerian
Government in recent years with the support of its development partners 3.
GDP growth is below 4% and population growth remains around 2% (ONS, 2016), which limits the
scope for improving the quality of life of the population.
In addition to this structural situation, the medium-term projections state that ‘although growth has been
resilient [in 2016], the planned fiscal consolidation stands to weigh on future activity, with implications for
unemployment’, according to an IMF report (IMF Staff Report, 2017) in which it is also stated that ‘real
GDP growth slowed modestly to 3.5% in 2016 from 3.8% in 2015’. Table 3.1 provides a summary of the
data relating to growth by economic sector, inflation and the level of public debt.
Real GDP growth at constant 4.0 4.5 3.8 1.5 0.6 1.5
factor prices
Note: f – forecast
Source: World Bank, Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice and Poverty Global Practice,
2017 report
According to the World Bank’s 2017 Global Expertise Report 4, ‘slow structural transformation is
hampering economic diversification from hydrocarbons, and consensus is lacking on key elements of
strategy, such as whether to push for export development or import substitution and the role of the
private sector. [...] Greater economic decentralisation would strengthen the role of local authorities,
3 www.premier-ministre.gov.dz/ressources/front/files/pdf/plans-d-actions/plan-d-action-du-gouvernement-2017-
fr.pdf
4 Report of the World Bank Macroeconomics and Fiscal Management Global Practice and Poverty Global
Practice.
In this context, the economy faces the challenge of social discontent, the continuing rise in youth
unemployment, slow structural transformation, a lack of decentralisation and a low level of female
participation in the labour force.
Employment by sector indicates that market and non-market services employ most workers (59.1%),
followed by construction and public works (17.0%), industry (13.8%) and agriculture (10.1%)
(see Figure 3.1).
Employment in the public sector declined from previous years to 36.9%, with women being
predominant (56.9%) (ONS, September 2017).
70.0%
60.0%
59.10%
50.0%
40.0%
30.0%
20.0%
10.0% 17%
13.80%
10.10%
0.0%
Trade and Construction Industry Agriculture
services and public
works
According to the Government 5, the challenge of unemployment will be tackled primarily by increasing
economic investment in all sectors and by reviving public investment programmes. At the same time,
that response will be supported by complementary programmes aimed in particular at the creation of
micro-enterprises by unemployed persons, including young persons. There will also be a review, in
2018, of the regulations and 20% of local public procurement will be reserved for micro-enterprises
created by young entrepreneurs.
This context of developing investment and promoting entrepreneurship may be viewed as favouring
the extension of the scope of vocational training and employment reforms, in order to develop human
5 Presentation of the Action Plan by the Prime Minister to the Popular National Assembly on 17 September 2017.
As a result of the lack labour market prospects and the gap between available skills and those sought
by employers, the labour force participation rate remains low, in particular for women at 16.6%
compared with 41.8% for the population as a whole (ONS, 2016), despite some improvements as
compared with previous years.
The unemployment rate is 10.5% (ONS, September 2016). It is 26.7% among young people aged
between 16 and 24 (22.3% for men and 49.9% for women – ONS, 2016), and the rate of young people
neither in employment nor in education or training (NEETs) is also high, totalling 27.6% (19.3% and
36.3% respectively for men and women, ONS, 2016). The economic slowdown, due in particular to the
fall in the price of oil, will negatively impact the unemployment rate according to IMF estimates (IMF
Staff Report, 2017). In this difficult context for employment, in particular youth employment, it is
necessary to strengthen programmes supporting professional integration, vocational training and
occupational apprenticeships in order to promote the employability of young people.
Significant dichotomies remain in the labour market in terms of the distribution by age, educational
attainment or gender. Women are largely excluded and their labour force participation rate generally
peaks around the age of 25 to 29 years, before declining gradually as they age. Employment by level
of education reveals that people with either a low level of education (ISCED – International Standard
Classification of Education – Levels 1 to 3) or a medium level of education are more likely to have a
job than people who have completed post-secondary education. The distribution of unemployment
rates by level of education is as follows: low level 6.8%, medium level 9.5% and post-secondary level
16.7% (ONS, 2016). The situation is even more critical for women, as the unemployment rate for
women who have completed post-secondary education is 21.8%. They have a participation rate three
times lower (15%) and an unemployment rate three times higher (20%) than that of men (ONS, 2016).
Moreover, it takes 50% of unemployed persons – i.e. 531 000 jobseekers – at least two years to find
employment (ONS, 2016), hence the significance of long-term unemployment, which necessitates
strengthened support and active measures to develop the skills of the people concerned and to help
them enter the labour market.
By 2025, approximately 50% of the population will be under 30 years of age (ONS, 2016). The steady
rise in the working-age population will result in increased pressure on the labour market. Issues
relating to the alignment of job seeking/economic growth/job creation are a priority in skills
development and employment promotion policies.
The transition towards the private sector has led to growth in the informal sector. According to the
expert Abderrahmane Mabtoul (2015), the informal sector represents more than 50% of the Algerian
market, and as a result more than half of the turnover of commercial activities bypasses the public
treasury. The informal sector in Algeria is favoured by legal uncertainty and the lack of visibility of
socio-economic policy. Since 2011, the Algerian authorities have been implementing legislation aimed
at integrating the informal market.
An analysis of the employment situation based on various labour market studies confirms that
unemployment and underemployment are mainly caused by economic, educational and training
factors and by passive labour market measures.
Economic causes
These are mainly related to structural weakness in the economy, in particular to export earnings, 97%
of which stem from hydrocarbons, and to the preponderance of small and very small enterprises within
the industrial and productive fabric, which account for 95% of all undertakings 6.
Causes connected with the mismatch between the supply of vocational training and the needs of the
labour market
These remain significant and are reflected, in particular, by the increase in the number of unemployed
persons who have never worked. In fact, the number of people training for a diploma almost doubled
between 2000 and 2016 (increasing from 303 564 to 614 942) (MFEP, 2017) but the percentage of
first-time jobseekers was still high (53.7%).
The pedagogical and logistical resources available for training were unable to keep pace with these
quantitative changes and were insufficient to bring about qualitative improvements capable of ensuring
the socio-economic integration of these young persons. The structural mismatch between the needs of
undertakings and the skills of trainees explains the high unemployment rate of 53.7% for first-time
jobseekers (ONS, September 2017, No 796). In addition to unemployed persons, people of working
age (between the ages of 16 and 59) who declare that they are available for work but who have taken
no effective steps to seek employment in the month preceding the survey are regarded as inactive and
constitute a source of hidden unemployment. According to the ONS, there were 1 264 persons in that
population category in September 2017, 50.6% of whom were under 30 years of age and 60.7% of
whom were women. Persons in this group are characterised by their low level of education (almost
70% have no qualifications and 57.4% have not proceeded beyond lower secondary education).
These include the social assistance measures adopted in the face of rising unemployment, which
provide unemployed persons with various sources of income (unemployment benefits, training
allowances, scholarships, support in creating micro-projects, etc.), without adequately coupling those
financial resources with active approaches to empower jobseekers, improve their employability and
ensure their lasting socio-economic integration. The introduction of an active approach requires the
development of support programmes for promoters of such approaches, the strengthening of work-
based training and skills development for beneficiaries of employment assistance programmes, and a
linkage between social assistance and participation in active training-insertion programmes,
occupational apprenticeship programmes or labour-intensive work programmes.
6Statement by Mr Abdelghani Mebarek, Director General for SMEs at the Ministry of Industry and Mines, March
2017.
Initial vocational training comprises five levels established by Decree No 91 of 23 December 2012,
namely:
Initial vocational training is mainly provided at training centres. It takes place in training establishments
(specialised national vocational training institutes, vocational training and apprenticeship centres, and
specialised vocational training and apprenticeship centres for physically handicapped persons), with
work placements after or during training. On those training courses, practical activities take place in
training centre workshops and laboratories. It is aimed at people aged 16 and over.
The vocational education and training sector has a twofold economic and social objective:
■ to ensure the training of a skilled workforce to meet the requirements of the labour market;
■ to provide training, advanced training and retraining for workers by means of continuing vocational
training.
Work-based learning is concerned with methods of learning based on practical skills in the actual
setting in which goods and services are produced. This form of training provides the learner with
practical skills and is beneficial for the undertaking, because of its direct relationship with the realities
and needs of its system of production, as well as being cost-effective for governments since it enables
trained individuals to be truly integrated into the workplace and allows workers to develop appropriate
skills by involving all stakeholders.
According to the ETF Handbook on work-based learning, work-based learning refers to learning that
occurs when people do real work. This work can be paid or unpaid, but it must be real work leading to
the production of real goods and services.
These placements involve periods of working within an undertaking, generally in areas directly related
to the training already provided. They are used as a way of passing from one level to another or
reinforcing the training given. Work placements supplement training and take place in undertakings,
usually in the course of the training (duration of one to three months) or following the training and
before qualifications are awarded (duration of six months). These placements allow young people to
acquire operational skills in the workplace through job coaching by relevant professionals. Generally,
only those placements that take place at the end of the period of training are paid, in the form of a
bursary in an amount not fixed by law.
Apprenticeships
These are a method of training aimed at the acquisition of initial professional certification, involving
attendance at vocational education and training establishments on block or day release from
businesses, tradesmen or the public sector. Apprenticeship training takes place in the context of a
professional apprenticeship, with 80% of the training being provided in the workplace and 20% of the
training provided at vocational training establishments. It takes place partly within training
establishments providing complementary technical and technological training and partly in businesses,
or with tradesmen or public administrative bodies, where practical training is provided. It is aimed at
young people aged 15 to 35 years. There is no age limit for people with physical disabilities. During an
apprenticeship, learning progression is generally determined by the undertaking, while the centre
provides theoretical learning that is not always well coordinated with the practical progression in the
undertaking.
The training given covers 20 sectors, 360 specialities and 5 levels of certification.
This training concerns the active working population and jobseekers. It is provided in several forms:
The ministry’s responsibility for training courses is subject to several conditions: they must be provided
by an approved provider, be subject to VAT invoicing, take place in the national territory and not be
carried out within the framework of a commercial contract (for the training of performers or for
measures accompanying the sale of equipment).
This type of training involves barely 300 undertakings and is carried out either within institutions and
training centres separate the undertaking or in intra-company centres (especially in the case of large
national institutions, almost all of which have in-house training centres).
Continuing education therefore remains very limited. The funds raised by the Ministry of Finance
through a 1% tax – which are then distributed by the FNAC – remain largely unused, mainly due to
complex administrative reimbursement procedures.
In 2014, the FNAC, in agreement with the MFEP, drew up a five-year plan with the aim of relaunching
its activities, reviewing its structure to make it more efficient and improving its services to businesses.
Certain activities have been put in place, in particular the training of FNAC training advisers in order to
strengthen their capacity to advise undertakings on the analysis of training skills and the development
of personalised training plans.
In order to make qualitative changes to continuing vocational training, it is necessary to carry out an
in-depth reform to allow a strategic partnership to be forged between the FNAC, employers’
organisations, workers’ organisations and the public authorities, so as to establish tripartite
management of these funds and to finance strategic actions capable of supporting the policy of
developing human resource skills and of career advancement for workers.
Among active employment measures, the DAIP establishes graduate integration contracts,
professional integration contracts and training-insertion contracts. Young people can benefit from
training and employment contracts which are 60% financed through the DAIP for a maximum period of
six months, if the employer undertakes to recruit the beneficiary for a minimum period of one year at
the end of the training. Within the framework of this programme, the possibility of undertaking two or
three placements (of 10 days maximum) should be set aside for trainees on placement in
undertakings. The retraining provided within the framework of the employment programmes remains
very limited in content and duration, and coordination between this training and the practical skills
acquired within the undertaking remain very limited.
The AFEQ project funded by the European Union includes four components (harmonisation, training,
employment, qualifications). In the context of two of those components, the project addresses the
strengthening of the adaptation-insertion programme, on the one hand, and apprenticeship training, on
the other. In particular, it provides support for the development of tools for this method of training
(management guide, teaching guide, curriculum adaptation, etc.). The programme has just been
launched and the first results are expected by the end of 2018.
In addition to their primary purpose of initial training, the networks of vocational training centres and
establishments implement continuing vocational training activities within the framework of a number of
agreements between the MFEP and other Ministries, as well as undertakings. In total, there are more
than 100 national framework agreements and over 7 500 specific local agreements. More generally,
continuing vocational training is a fast-growing market.
These institutions also provide evening classes for 32 291 learners and distance learning courses for
39 740 learners, according to data from the 2016 Statistical Yearbook of the MFEP. This represents
11.7% of the numbers in vocational training.
Under the law of 2008, the network has been extended with the addition of new establishments since
2012. These are vocational education institutes, which are dedicated to a new method of training
known as vocational education (with the purpose of improving the image of vocational training) and
should eventually admit 30 to 40% of students admitted to the post-compulsory cycle, for training
courses of two to four years’ duration aimed at professional integration after graduation, while allowing
further studies at the higher education level.
Vocational education institutes offer occupational training in the main sectors (industry, agriculture and
agri-food sector, hotels and tourism, building and civil engineering, management, accounting and
sales), which are organised working closely with business. Work placements in business are planned
during and after the training.
Some 80% of apprenticeship training is provided by business undertakings and the remaining 20% is
provided by CFPAs. This form of training is for young people aged 15 to 35 and covers
20 professional sectors, 360 specialities and 5 levels of qualification. It is estimated that the theoretical
training capacity of business is 500 000 places, but only 168 178 apprentices were actually registered
in 2016, according to the 2016 MFEP Statistical Yearbook.
The duration of training varies from 12 to 36 months depending on the specialities and the levels of
training. An employer may recruit an apprentice either through an employment scheme or directly.
This recruitment is subject to an apprenticeship contract that governs the relationship between the
employer and the apprentice, as set out by law.
Upon recruitment, the apprentice receives a training allowance, paid directly by the employer in the
case of undertakings employing more than 20 workers or by the State if the undertaking employs
fewer than 20 workers, for a period of 6‒12 months. After this period, the employer pays the allowance
The employer is exempt from any social security contributions relating to the apprentice and from any
fixed payments corresponding to tax on the allowance. Those costs are borne by the State throughout
the apprenticeship contract. During the training, the apprentice is supervised by an apprenticeship
supervisor within the undertaking and a trainer at the vocational training establishment. The
assessment of acquired skills is carried out jointly by the apprenticeship supervisor and the trainer.
The examination at the end of the apprenticeship is organised by the vocational training establishment
with the participation of the professionals.
The team of inspectors responsible for vocational apprenticeship training provides pedagogical
assessment and supervision. The local Conciliation Commission is responsible for the resolution and
amicable settlement of any disputes arising from performance of the apprenticeship contract.
In 2016, there were 815 CFPAs and 192 CFPA satellite centres, providing a total learning capacity of
236 745 places. Vocational training and apprenticeship centres account for the vast majority of centres
(87%) and training places (82%).
Apprenticeship training is increasingly favoured by the Algerian state and is a priority of the 2015‒19
action plan for the vocational training sector. And for good reason: an apprenticeship is the least
expensive method of training, the closest to the world of work and the most effective for the
professional integration of graduates. Supervised apprenticeships continue to gain ground
(113 141 apprentices in 2000, 198 883 in 2005 and 343 523 in 2016, according to the 2016 Statistical
Yearbook of the MFEP, published in June 2017).
The change in the number of apprentices well illustrates this interest. Indeed, vocational
apprenticeship training accounted for only 37.2% of the number of persons on training courses leading
to a diploma in 2000 compared with almost 55.8% in 2016 (2016 Statistical Yearbook of the MFEP).
614942
600000 583952
568537
500000
521513 513915
463524
400000 433384
338797
300000 303564
200000
100000
0
2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Source: MFEP, 2016 Statistical Yearbook, June 2017
900
815
800 743
700
600
524
500
400 337
300 255
200 155
100
2 16
0
1963 1968 1993 1995 2004 2011 2012 2016
In addition to these centres, other apprenticeship training structures have been established, known as
CFPA satellite centres (192 satellite centres are attached to existing centres but located in rural areas
to provide local training). The trend is for the further integration of satellite centres into CFPAs.
The teaching capacity of the CFPAs is approximately 145 000 training places, plus a further
23 000 places in satellite centres.
250 218
210
192
200 178
150
100
50
0
2000 2004 2011 2016
The recognition of vocational training by the Constitution and the promulgation of the 2008 Framework
law (Official Journal, 2 March 2008) charted a new course for this system, making a renewal of
occupational apprenticeship programmes possible.
■ The promulgation in 2008 of the framework law on vocational education and training, which
defined the various training schemes and methods; the law on apprenticeships (Law No 81-07)
was amended in January 2013 to raise the age limit for access to these programmes from 25 to
35 years.
■ An instruction from the Prime Minister was issued in November 2013, making the award of public
contracts to undertakings conditional on their development of apprenticeships.
■ The taxes relating to vocational training and apprenticeship have been combined into a single tax
in order to make the two methods of training interchangeable and to extend their scope to SMEs
with fewer than 20 employees.
■ The drawing up of a blueprint for vocational training and apprenticeships, which has set out
guidelines for development of the sector until 2025.
■ The implementation of the five-year plans for vocational education and training (2010–14/
2015–19), which scheduled the creation of new training centres and the expansion of the
capacity of the vocational education and training system to 600 000 places per year.
■ The DAIP has been supplemented by a new programme of first-time employment contracts for
young people, which, for three years, covers the full salary of any young person recruited in the
context of that programme (it should be noted that the DAIP sets the maximum salary at
DZD 15 000).
■ The commitment to implement partnership agreements between the MFEP and employers’
associations representing the main productive sectors and groups, particularly in the main
employment areas.
Adopted in February 2018, a new law on vocational training provided for the development of the
system with better legal protection for apprentices and a strengthening of educational support for
apprenticeship schemes.
That law was drafted in the context of implementing the five-year plan for the sector (2015‒19), which
has made apprenticeship training a key focus in meeting the human-resource needs of business and
facilitating the employment of graduates and their professional integration. That law essentially aims to
develop the functioning of the apprenticeship system and for employers and local stakeholders to be
more involved in the management of apprenticeships, the creation of a system of teaching supervision
and support for apprenticeships, the widening of the scope of apprenticeships to foreign undertakings
in Algeria and to industrial and commercial public undertakings within the sphere of the National
People’s Army, and the development of apprentices’ rights. The law emphasises:
The legal framework for professional apprenticeships in Algeria allows young people to obtain five
levels of vocational training qualifications through apprenticeships. Diplomas for the Specialised
Vocational Training Certificate (CFPS), the Certificate of Professional Competence (CAP), the
Certificate of Professional Mastery (CMP), the Technician’s Certificate (BT) and the Higher
Technician’s Certificate (BTS) are all available within the apprenticeship framework.
Moreover, there are 36 322 young people in apprenticeship training for the higher levels of BT and
BTS, accounting for almost 25% of the total number of apprentices in 2016. This opening up to higher
levels of skills has allowed apprenticeship to become a fully-fledged system within the vocational
training framework.
Although almost two thirds of apprentices reach Level 2 (CAP), just over 20% of apprentices have
access to the higher levels of either Technician’s Certificate or Higher Technician’s Certificate.
Since the introduction of these five levels of apprenticeship training, and unlike in other countries in
the region, this method of training has emerged as a path to success for young people and could raise
the quality of the entire vocational training system. It is quite possible for young people to ‘take the
plunge’, allowing them to obtain a high level of qualification through apprenticeships (technologist,
professional engineer or other position), and this is necessary to implement in practice and reinforce
the success of this legal framework for enhancing professional apprenticeships.
The involvement of local authorities and the territorial coverage of apprenticeships: the
experience of local apprenticeship animation centres
The ‘Promotion of Vocational Apprenticeship Training’ project arose within the context of cooperation
between Algeria and Germany. The aim of this project is to improve the quality of apprenticeship
training through enhanced cooperation between undertakings and vocational training establishments,
in order to ensure that young people are better qualified for employment and self-employment.
The first two stages of the project were carried out by the National Office for the Development and
Promotion of Continuing Education (ONDEFOC in French, formerly INDEFOC) and the third stage
was carried out by the National Institute for Vocational Education and Training (INFEP). Technical
assistance is provided by GIZ and the GOPA group (a German engineering consulting firm). The
project established local apprenticeship animation centres and apprenticeship animation centres at
These centres were established in Blida for the Algiers area, Boumerdes and Bejaia for the central
region, Tlemcen for the west, Annaba for the east, El Oued for the south-east and Bechar for the
south-west.
This experience has resulted in very significant achievements for the system and led to the
development of all the tools needed to revitalise apprenticeship management in the context of a
partnership between training providers and workplaces. Those achievements include:
■ the conception and implementation of new learning expertise for vocational apprenticeship
training;
■ the development of a methodology for the development of apprenticeship training programmes
founded on basic progression in the workplace and support by training establishments;
■ the development of the 14 pilot programmes for vocational apprenticeship training;
■ the development of tools for a comprehensive framework to organise, manage, monitor and
assess apprenticeship training;
■ the development of the necessary teaching aids for apprenticeships: the guide for apprenticeship
supervisors, the guide for implementing apprenticeship training programmes, the guide for
assessing vocational apprenticeship training and the guide for the supervision of apprentices by
mentors.
This project has had very positive effects, particularly in terms of training for workplace mentors and
partnerships between undertakings and training establishments. The success of this project was
confirmed by an impact assessment carried out on the basis of a survey of undertakings. The final
report of the ‘Promotion of Vocational Apprenticeship Training’ project, published on 22 March 2011 by
INFEP and GIZ, presented the results of the three impact assessment surveys carried out, which
relied on a sample of 224 undertakings (143 private sector undertakings and 81 public sector
undertakings in the fields of industry, construction, services and handicrafts).
■ the training of apprenticeship supervisors, which received the full support of business leaders;
■ the regulation of occupations and of the partnership between those responsible for
apprenticeships at training institutions and in undertakings;
■ the occupational committees which allow stakeholders to work together within a strengthened
partnership framework.
■ 87% of apprenticeship supervisors who participated in the training are satisfied with the new skills
acquired through this training;
These achievements are a source of inspiration for resolving the present difficulties of the system, as
identified in this study. This is particularly true in relation to the need to develop an autonomous and
specialised framework capable of both ensuring coordinated management of the system and
establishing coherent and lasting partnerships between workplace mentors (apprenticeship
supervisors) and individuals responsible for apprenticeship training.
Apprenticeship training is governed by regulations relating to registered occupations, for which the
State, in consultation with the social partners, determines the content and qualifications as well as
minimum performance requirements. This method of training is recognised by the Constitution, the
Labour Code and other legislation, as outlined below.
In the revised version of the Constitution (March 2016), Article 37 provides that ‘young people are the
lifeblood for building the nation. The State shall endeavour to provide all the conditions necessary for
developing their capabilities and enhancing their energies.’ Article 69, which recognises the right to
work of all citizens (‘All citizens shall have the right to work’), refers to apprenticeships as a means of
access to employment and recognises the State’s duty to promote apprenticeships: ‘The State shall
endeavour to promote apprenticeships and establish policies to assist in the creation of employment’
(Constitution of the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria, 2016).
Article 15 of the Labour Code, concerning the minimum age for the recruitment of workers, states that
under no circumstances may persons below 16 years of age be recruited, ‘except within the
framework of apprenticeship contracts drawn up in accordance with the legislation and regulations in
force’.
Chapter V of the same code relates to the obligations of employers with regard to training. Article 57
states that ‘the employer is also required under the legislation in force to organise apprenticeship
activities to enable young people to acquire the theoretical and practical knowledge necessary for the
exercise of an occupation’.
In addition to these two basic legislative texts, other laws, orders, decrees and measures concerning
apprenticeships have been promulgated and cover all aspects from the design to the practice of
apprenticeship training.
Formal apprenticeship training was introduced for the first time by Decree No 75.31 of 29 April 1975.
Following that first decree, three basic laws were promulgated and govern apprenticeships in Algeria:
In fact, it is Basic Law No 81-07 of 27 June 1981 on apprenticeships, amended and supplemented by
the Law of 2003, which defined the scope, duties and role of each stakeholder, and set out the
detailed arrangements for implementing apprenticeships.
Several laws, regulations, decrees and ministerial orders have been promulgated in order to adapt the
regulatory framework to economic and social developments and to provide solutions to the problems
encountered when implementing legislative measures.
Law No 81-07 laid the foundations for the apprenticeship system in Algeria
The first articles (Articles 1 and 2) of Law No 81-07 define apprenticeship as ‘a form of vocational
training aimed at the acquisition, in the course of employment, of a recognised initial vocational
qualification, allowing the exercise of an occupation in various sectors of economic activity related to
the production of goods and services. That qualification is acquired through the practical, repeated
and progressive performance of the various operations relating to the exercise of the occupation in
question and through complementary theoretical and technological training provided at training
facilities approved by the government department responsible for vocational training’.
The complementary theoretical and technological training for apprentices is provided within three
basic frameworks (Article 3) at:
As regards practical training, it is provided by the employers specified in Article 7 of the same law.
That is to say:
In general, the apprenticeship system relies on the training capacities of SMEs and enables young
people no longer at school to acquire, by working in the occupation of their choice, the qualifications
necessary for their integration into working life.
The second chapter of the law contains articles on the rights and duties of each of the three
stakeholders: the apprentice, the employer and the training provider. Their rights and duties are
expressly referred to in the employment contract (Articles 10 to 19). It should be pointed out, in this
Law No 14-09 of 9 August 2014 complements the Basic Law of 2000. Published in Official Journal
No 49, it further extends the age limit of apprentices to 35 years for all persons, except for those with
disabilities, for whom there is no age limit.
The third chapter of Law No 81-07, on the supervision of apprenticeships, deals with the
responsibilities and rights of training providers. Articles 27 to 29 entrust those providers with ‘technical
and pedagogical control of apprenticeships and permanent operational control’. Human resources
(trainers responsible for theoretical apprenticeship teaching and supervisors responsible for
monitoring the implementation of technical, pedagogical and administrative programmes) and teaching
aids (apprenticeship handbooks for periodically monitoring and assessing an apprentice’s training) are
made available to ensure the smooth operation of this training method.
The institutional framework for apprenticeships is characterised by the division of roles and
responsibilities between the various stakeholders involved (at the time of writing this report):
■ the State provides the apprenticeship contract that must be signed in triplicate by the employer
and the apprentice or his or her legal guardian. The State is also responsible for determining
work-based learning policy, with the active participation of the various stakeholders concerned,
and for regulating this sector and its good governance;
■ employers – by law, all employers are required to provide vocational training to young people in
the form of apprenticeships;
■ apprentices – the relationship between an employer and an apprentice is governed by an
apprenticeship contract in which an employer undertakes to provide a systematic and
comprehensive vocational training service to an apprentice who, in return, undertakes to work for
the employer;
■ the team of inspectors responsible for vocational apprenticeship training provides pedagogical
assessment and supervision;
■ the institutions responsible for vocational training and apprenticeships, known as vocational
training and apprenticeship centres (CFPA);
■ the local apprenticeship animation centres – in the context of the collaborative project with
Germany, local apprenticeship facilitation centres were established in five wilayas. These centres
may be regarded as a good practice because they promote relationships and links between the
various stakeholders and between undertakings and CFPAs at the local level.
■ the labour inspectorate is responsible for ensuring that apprenticeship legislation and regulations
are enforced;
■ Chambers of trade and industry, of crafts and professions and of agriculture at national, regional
and provincial (wilaya) level, professional associations, employers’ associations and relevant
groups contribute to apprenticeship initiatives, in particular by organising events to make
undertakings aware of this method of training, by putting forward specific proposals for its
development: broadening the partnership with the ministries involved in managing
apprenticeships, strengthening the activities of the FNAC in order better to target support for in-
house training (training of workplace mentors, management of incentives for that group, etc.) and
The MFEP is the executive authority entrusted by the State with overseeing the management of the
vocational training system, including work-based learning.
The authority of the MFEP is exercised directly by a government department organised around nine
broad directorates covering all areas of strategy development, planning and implementation. From the
point of view of governance, it is important to note: (i) the specific role played by the Directorate of
Continuing Education; and (ii) the inter-sectoral relationships, which cover not only continuing
education, but also private establishments and relations with the social partners, particularly in the
context of the Partnership Council. Within the MFEP’s Directorate for Organising and Monitoring
Training, there is also a Sub-directorate for the Development of Apprenticeships, to monitor the
management of the establishments responsible for apprenticeships, and a Sub-directorate for
Pedagogical Organisation and Standardisation, which deals with the pedagogical aspects of learning.
The MFEP also relies on a group of major national institutions and regional institutions.
■ the National Institute for Vocational Training (INFP), a public administrative establishment
responsible for pedagogical expertise and the training of supervisory staff and specialised trainers
of vocational training institutions, and for carrying out studies and research covering all training
methods and the development of learning programmes;
■ the National Distance Learning Centre (CNEPD), which organises distance learning in various
wilayas;
■ the Centre for Studies and Research on Occupations and Qualifications (CERPEQ), an industrial
and commercial public undertaking whose mission is to carry out studies and research in relation
to qualifications;
■ the National Development Fund for Apprenticeships and Continuing Vocational Training (FNAC),
a special public establishment which promotes and develops continuing work-based training and
apprenticeships, in connection with the business sector;
■ the National Office for the Development and Promotion of Continuing Education (ONDEFOC), an
industrial and commercial public undertaking responsible for assisting businesses and training
centres to promote and develop continuing vocational training, and for the training of trainers and
apprenticeship supervisors;
■ the National Establishment of Vocational Training Equipment (ENEFP), a public administrative
establishment that plans and schedules the acquisition, delivery and installation of technical
educational equipment in VET establishments.
■ the directorates for vocational education and training (DFEPs) of the wilaya, which are the
decentralised services of the MFEP for the 48 wilayas;
■ the vocational training institutes (IFPs), which ensure the development and adaptation of training
and apprenticeship programmes;
■ the specialised national vocational training institutes involved in training at levels 4 and 5
(BT and BTS).
■ The National Employment Agency (ANEM) has 165 local offices and 11 regional centres and
manages, in particular, the Professional Insertion Measures Programme (DAIP). This programme
is based on graduate integration contracts for graduate jobseekers from universities and technical
schools, professional integration contracts for secondary school leavers and persons completing
vocational training, and training-insertion contracts (CFIs) for young people without qualifications.
■ The National Unemployment Insurance Fund (CNAC) has 5 regional centres and 48 offices, and
action programmes for unemployed persons aged 30 to 50 in the context of support for setting up
businesses and support for setting up and expanding businesses; unemployment insurance,
allowances.
As regards the amount of this tax, Article 5 of the Decree states that ‘the amounts due in respect of
the abovementioned taxes shall be determined according to the efforts made by the employers in
continuing vocational training and apprenticeship activities’. The competent departments of the tax
authorities are responsible for collecting these taxes (Article 8). The receipts are to be transferred to
special purposes account No 302-091, entitled the ‘National Development Fund for Apprenticeships
and Continuing Vocational Training’ (FNAC). The FNAC, under the supervision of the MFEP, is
responsible for the financial management of resources obtained from taxes relating to apprenticeship
and continuing vocational training. It also provides information, support and advice activities.
Vocational education and training, as well as active employment measures, receive quite substantial
funding from the State. This funding has even been significantly increased and strengthened in recent
years, particularly with regard to the salaries of teachers and trainers, infrastructure and equipment
and the conditions of access to the various arrangements for both undertakings and trainees. State
funding is supplemented primarily by contributions from businesses, in particular through the
vocational training tax and the apprenticeship tax, both fixed at 1% of the wage bill and from which the
sums spent on workplace training and apprenticeship activities are deducted; the remainder goes to
the FNAC, which promotes training and training expertise for undertakings. The actual expenditure of
undertakings is not known precisely, but it seems to be increasing with strong growth in the continuing
vocational training market.
The funding mechanism, developed to promote continuing vocational training and apprenticeships
within businesses, operates as follows: undertakings deduct from this 1% the amounts spent on
apprenticeship and continuing vocational training activities carried out over the course of the
preceding six months (as evidenced by a special committee established in each wilaya), and the
remaining amounts are paid to the Treasury and transferred to the FNAC on the basis of its
requirements. It is therefore a tax on the ‘non-provision of training’.
Vocational Apprenticeship
training tax tax
The FNAC finances the development and implementation of continuing vocational training plans for
undertakings, as well as training for groups of undertakings, and training expertise activities. The
FNAC works at the request of eligible undertakings (those having paid taxes).
The funding for retraining, integration support and business start-up support activities carried out in the
context of active employment measures by the relevant agencies (CNAC, ANSEJ, ANGEM, ADS, etc.)
is provided by those agencies under agreements concluded with public VET institutions and the
undertakings concerned.
Incentive measures
In addition to measures taken by the FNAC, new measures to develop apprenticeships and incentive
measures for businesses and young jobseekers have been taken under the DAIP, encouraging
undertakings to train their employees by means of a reduction of the rate of VAT to 7% (instead of
17%), provided that the training is carried out with the assistance of an approved establishment.
Significant school dropout rate, failure of careers guidance and continued decline in the quality
of education
All these factors demotivate young people and provide no encouragement for them to enter vocational
training or occupational apprenticeships. The social situation of young people whose age makes them
eligible for education or training is characterised by a very significant dropout rate. An analysis of the
statistical data of the Ministry of Education confirms that post-primary education, in particular, is
marked by a significant dropout rate following the last year of each cycle (accordingly, in the last three
years, 2015‒17, an average of 40% of pupils obtained the lower secondary examination certificate).
Moreover, the vocational training and apprenticeship system does not have a role as an independent,
parallel and complementary system providing guidance to young people who have professional and
practical skills to develop. Therefore, basic guidance is focussed solely on conceptual knowledge,
which deters young people from taking vocational training courses and entering apprenticeships.
Based on the documentary analysis and the stakeholder interviews (including with representatives of
the Business Leaders Forum and the private undertakings visited), it was noted that vocational training
and apprenticeships are based not on business supply in the context of a dynamic market for
enhancing the employability of young people and adapting their professional skills to the needs of
those undertakings, but more on the social demand of young people who have usually dropped out of
school.
This situation means that apprenticeship training is increasingly driven by the social demand of young
people and does not help to resolve the problem of aligning training with employment, while taking into
account specialities and skills as determined by undertakings.
As a positive example, the dual training and apprenticeship system in Germany was successful only
when it was based on trade associations and chambers of skilled trades, as well as on the needs and
capacity of undertakings to provide apprentices with educational places and posts in the workplace.
Employers’ federations in Algeria such as the Business Leaders Forum have consistently called for
more active participation in policy development and system management in collaboration with public
authorities.
Some of the shortcomings, from a pedagogical and internal perspective, of the organisation of
apprenticeship training at the level of undertakings and CFPAs are listed below.
■ The apprenticeship training system is hampered by the absence of an organisation to provide real
coordination between trainers in CFPAs and workplace mentors. The body which should provide
that coordination and monitor the learning of apprentices in undertakings and CFPAs (the body of
apprenticeship advisers) has not yet been established or recognised.
■ Training places within undertakings are still very limited and poorly organised, with a significant
lack of places specifically for teaching apprentices the basic skills that will eventually enable them
to be integrated into productive activities, notwithstanding the significant role played by SMEs,
The disparity between ‘theory and practice’ in implementing block or day release training
courses at vocational training institutions
In an article of 2011, Abdelmadjid Boudjebbour states that learners have great difficulty in forging links
between subject content, learning in the formal environment (the training or educational
establishment) and actual work situations within undertakings.
Theoretically, apprenticeship training is based on a targeted skills approach that promotes the transfer
of learning in the various situations, which the learner will experience. However, the separation
between the various training locations (training establishments and undertakings) makes this transfer
more unlikely than ever before. This situation is the result of several causes, in particular the failure on
the part of trainers (apprenticeship supervisors) to master productive professional skills, the lack of
pedagogical skills of workplace mentors, the weakness of teaching expertise which would enable the
development of progression based essentially on the practical stages of occupational apprenticeships,
and the lack of means for collaborative and interactive work between the unit engaged in production
and the CFPA. The results of our field analysis of the system confirmed the lack of linkage between
theoretical training to support apprentices in CFPAs and on-the-job training provided in the workplace.
There is no coordination between workplace mentors and trainers (apprentice advisers) at the
pedagogical level, and the follow-up visits of CFPA representatives to undertakings are administrative
visits to monitor the attendance of apprentices more than they are pedagogical visits for collaboration
with mentors. The theoretical courses for apprentices in CFPAs are delivered by trainers either in
addition to their weekly schedule, or by including apprentices in vocational training classes.
Mismatch between the skills needs of undertakings and the aspirations of young people with
regard to vocational training and apprenticeships
The mismatch between training and employment is often advanced to explain unemployment. In terms
of training and apprenticeships, it is more of a qualitative mismatch between the aspirations of young
people to be trained in occupations and specialities ‘valued’ in the labour market and socially
(technological, IT, agri-food, pharmaceutical, electronic and technical occupations in advanced sectors
such as aeronautics, etc.) and the pressing needs of the economy and undertakings in other fields
(maintenance, mechanics, mechatronics, building and construction, metal construction, refrigeration
and air-conditioning, sanitary plumbing, carpentry, electricity, agriculture, catering, tourism, etc.). This
mismatch is the result of a convergence of cultural, social, professional and economic factors, which
devalue several occupations. This is due, in particular, to the old-fashioned way in which they are
exercised, to the lack of a career vision and decent working conditions in a number of sectors and
occupations, and to social prejudices. This situation necessitates the development of specific plans to
enhance the standing of occupations within undertakings, in society and in the public sphere. That
improved standing should be based on the real and effective actions of public authorities, trade
associations, civil society and the education and university systems, which affect all aspects of
occupations: professional classification, status, organisation, technology, career plans, safety at work,
possibility of being real social and professional ladders for young people, etc.
The shortcomings observed concern above all trainers’ limited professional skills, in particular in
relation to the exercise of the occupations concerned. This may be due to the initial lack of
professional experience in exercising the occupation (when recruited the trainer was not required to
have actual professional experience); the lack of work placements to update those practical skills in
the context of engaging in production techniques, work organisation processes, etc.; or limited
teaching skills (inability to ensure progress on the basis of operational skills).
Indeed, and as confirmed by the professionals who provided field interviews, certain occupational
tasks require not only knowledge of the occupation but also mastery of particular know-how or
particular skills. However, certain skills (skills related to the environment, etc.) require experiential
learning through facing real situations and problems on the ground. The main objectives of alternating
periods of study and work, in the apprenticeship training method, are the effective integration of
learning and the development of skills through the process of transferring operational knowledge,
which should therefore be properly mastered by a trainer.
The management of the training system is based on a very close relationship between trade
associations, undertakings, local, national and international development stakeholders, public
authorities and stakeholders within other training systems. This relationship requires great
organisational flexibility, continuous adaptation to the demands on the ground and to changing
situations, and a fast and efficient decision-making capability. These challenges require, in addition to
the design of a better quality system of governance, increased independence of management
structures at various levels (CFPA, regional directorates, central directorates, etc.) to allow them better
to adapt to rapid changes and to meet continually changing needs. That is why increased
independence of training and apprenticeship establishments is essential, to ensure a rapid response
to situations on the ground and an effective link between the need to integrate the establishment’s
management system into the overall management of the system, on the one hand, and the need to
respond to the specific needs of niche production and employment, on the other.
Role of the territories in the vocational training and apprenticeship system very limited in spite
of the efforts made
The official structures for implementing a professional apprenticeship system are the employers’
organisations, the trade unions and the public authorities. However, those stakeholders themselves
often lack resources and skills (employers’ organisations) and are not able to respond actively to local
needs on the ground, because of the centralisation of decision-making in particular.
Financing system remains rigid and ill adapted to the needs of stakeholders
In every workshop, meeting and tripartite consultation, the bureaucracy managing the system of
funding for work-based learning has been singled out for several reasons, mostly relating to the rigidity
of the system and the difficulty of adapting it to the real needs of stakeholders, in particular
undertakings and employers’ organisations. The absence of tripartite management for the system of
funding and the complexity of the reimbursement procedure explain, in part, the fact that some funding
has remained unused despite the need for undertakings to develop workers’ skills. A large part of this
Absence of a quality assurance approach involving the undertaking and the vocational training
and apprenticeship establishment, to develop the organisation of block or day release courses
through better involvement of mentors and trainers, to manage more effectively learning
progression during training in both (professional and training) environments and to increase
the quality of the technical content of the programmes and their training pedagogy
apprenticeship trainers/advisers. The absence of these two foundations for the establishment of a
system of apprenticeship training and work-based learning in general hampers the development of a
coherent and uniform system of work-based learning that ensures coordination and synergy between
the practical aspects of learning progression in the workplace and the theoretical aspects of learning
progression in CFPAs.
Despite the declarations of the 2012 Summit of European Heads of State and Ministers in charge of
Education and Vocational Education and Training in the Western Mediterranean Countries (Marseilles,
27 and 28 October 2012), the implementation of relevant cooperation programmes is not in line, in
terms of content and budget, with the priority given by the national authorities to the vocational training
sector and in particular to work-based learning, which is the fundamental tool for improving the
economic competitiveness of undertakings and developing workers’ skills. In the 2014‒17 European
Union-Algeria Cooperation Programme, and although the issue of employment was regarded as
among the three priorities of the programme, work-based learning is included only in the context of the
AFEQ (apprenticeship component and component relating to the support fund for the professional
integration and adaptation of jobseekers).
■ The Minister for Vocational Education and Training announced an ambitious goal for
apprenticeships and highlighted in his speech of 7 November 2017 ‘public authority guidance for
human resources training and development, which is intended to favour occupational
apprenticeship methods, involving national and foreign undertakings in teaching, so as to promote
graduate employability’. The goal is to increase the proportion of apprenticeship training in the
vocational training system from the current 53% to 70% over the next five years.
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Morocco, ETF
Aziz Jaouani Senior Specialist in VET Policies and Systems, Torino Process
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monitoring of vocational training, MFEP
Ameur Souhila Professor specialised in 2nd degree education and vocational training,
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