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  • 17 hours ago
«استخدام من کار سختی نخواهد بود»؛ پرتغال برای جبران کمبود مهارت‌ها بر آموزش فنی‌وحرفه‌ای تکیه می‌کند

پرتغال با حمایت مالی حدود ۱.۵ میلیارد یورویی اتحادیه‌ی اروپا، آموزش فنی‌وحرفه‌ای را گسترش می‌دهد تا ۵۵ درصد از دانش‌آموزان دوره ی دبیرستان برای مشاغل پرتقاضا آماده شوند.

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لب بیشتر : http://parsi.euronews.com/2026/06/24/it-wont-be-hard-to-hire-me-portugal-relies-on-technical-and-vocational-training-to-fil

مشترک شوید: یورونیوز به یازده زبان دیگر در دسترس شماست

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00:02Across Europe, 40% of employers complain they can't find workers with the right skills to fill their vacancies.
00:09So here in Portugal, the country is making a push to promote vocational education and training.
00:15It's what I really like.
00:17To be here to move, to put your hands on the table, it's what I really like.
00:20I think that with the practice that we acquired, it will be easy to employ myself.
00:34The students at this school are learning skills which are very much in demand in today's job market.
00:40Yet we know that the workplace is changing rapidly with the arrival of AI, the digital and green transitions.
00:46So how is vocational education and training adapting to this new challenge?
00:57Here at the Seor School in Famalikau, over 400 students are learning everything from how to weld metal to how
01:05to measure blood pressure.
01:07They believe their courses are perfectly adapted to societal trends.
01:11An aging population needs pharmacists.
01:15A digitized low carbon economy needs electricians and CNC programmers.
01:19And when it comes to AI, nobody here worries that a robot will take their job.
01:25I think that robots and artificial intelligence will never be able to replace it.
01:30Even though they can find the problem, they will never be able to explain to clients how the problem came
01:37out and how they can solve the problem.
01:40Inteligencia artificial intelligence serves as a tool.
01:43I use it many times to acquire a more technical vocabulary and such.
01:49But at any time I think it will replace the pharmaceutical advice.
01:53Portugal's push for skills is nationwide.
01:56The government wants 55% of secondary school students to be enrolled in vocational education and training by 2030
02:03and nearly 1.5 billion euros from the European Social Fund Plus will go to support that vocational training via
02:11Portugal's Pessoas 2030 economic program.
02:15The director of this school regularly meets employers to be sure that training courses match the skills they require now
02:22and in the future.
02:23And he also stresses that their students should learn to be good employees.
02:28And that requires a whole different set of skills.
02:30We have to look at the training, an integral of the individual.
02:35And a young or an adult who has the soft skills that the market today needs,
02:43to be creative, cumpridor, competent, communicator, etc.
02:47All these skills are transversal in any professional activity.
02:53Despite the funding efforts, the European Society as a whole sends mixed messages about vocational training.
03:00According to a recent Eurobarometer survey, only half of Europeans would actually recommend vocational education and training to young people.
03:09While at the same time, 85% of Europeans agree that such training provides relevant skills for much-in-demand
03:16jobs.
03:18Many governments would like to encourage students to learn valuable, hands-on skills.
03:23So what kinds of policies are needed to better promote vocational training?
03:31Here at the University of Porto's School of Economics and Management, we met up with Professor Aurora Teixeira.
03:37She argues for higher salaries for new recruits and more investment in innovation within companies.
03:44And says governments need to consider the wider economic context.
03:47The educational policy has to be an educational policy combined with an industrial policy and a company's policy.
03:57The professional training is a necessary condition to ensure that the country is more competitive and the companies are more
04:03competitive.
04:05One of the leading employers in this region of Portugal is German camera and optics company Leica.
04:10They hired former SEOR student Antonio Cruz as a maintenance electrician at age 18.
04:17Now, four years later, he says school might be over, but the learning continues.
04:21What I would like to learn more is, perhaps, about building electricity, but also focus on the subject of machines.
04:34We've also started with robotics.
04:36And this will make a lot of difference for us.
04:43As governments seek to promote vocational education and training more widely, the future is promising for these students,
04:50with three-quarters of trainees at this school finding work as soon as they finish their studies.
04:55And the new
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