Moldova Socioemotional Skills Assessment

Moldovan employers voice concerns that workers’ low levels of socioemotional capabilities, such as poor work ethics, lack of motivation, and limited problem-solving skills, are among the major constraints for business development and productivity....

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/126081570163253927/Moldova-Socioemotional-Skills-Assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32514
id okr-10986-32514
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-325142021-05-25T09:28:13Z Moldova Socioemotional Skills Assessment World Bank EDUCATION HUMAN CAPITAL SKILLS DEVELOPMENT SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS Moldovan employers voice concerns that workers’ low levels of socioemotional capabilities, such as poor work ethics, lack of motivation, and limited problem-solving skills, are among the major constraints for business development and productivity. The World Bank’s 2013 Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey, the 2016 Labor Market Forecast of Moldova, and a qualitative interview among private sector representatives in 2017 suggest that employers face skills shortages, particularly in areas of work ethics, motivation, and problem solving. The magnitude of skills shortages in Moldova is the highest in the Europe and Central Asia region. The Moldovan labor market will benefit from an increased supply of employees, including new recruits, with a range of relevant socioemotional as well as cognitive capabilities. This report provides a first diagnostic of socioemotional skills in Moldova to profile the skills composition of grade 9 students, identify learning context measures that are strongly associated with socioemotional skills, and clarify options for policy makers and practitioners to foster socioemotional skills. To this end, the Moldovan Socioemotional Skills Assessment was launched in April 2019. This assessment focused on grade 9 students to better understand how much socioemotional skills students exiting the end of the compulsory school cycle self-reported, and how these skills were associated with learning inputs from schools and families. This assessment was the first to evaluate a range of socioemotional skills among school-age children in Moldova, using measures that had been validated internationally. The measures were designed to capture five broad domains of socioemotional skills, including students’ self-reported capacity to ‘work with others’, ‘care for others’, ‘engage with others’, ‘explore new horizons’, and ‘manage emotions. The assessment provided not only technical validation of the measurement tools in Moldova but also initial guidance for policies and practices to foster these skills. The results suggest that such measurement tools can be mobilized in Moldova in the future. 2019-10-08T17:46:11Z 2019-10-08T17:46:11Z 2019-10-01 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/126081570163253927/Moldova-Socioemotional-Skills-Assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32514 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Education Study Europe and Central Asia Moldova
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic EDUCATION
HUMAN CAPITAL
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS
spellingShingle EDUCATION
HUMAN CAPITAL
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
SOCIO-EMOTIONAL SKILLS
World Bank
Moldova Socioemotional Skills Assessment
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Moldova
description Moldovan employers voice concerns that workers’ low levels of socioemotional capabilities, such as poor work ethics, lack of motivation, and limited problem-solving skills, are among the major constraints for business development and productivity. The World Bank’s 2013 Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey, the 2016 Labor Market Forecast of Moldova, and a qualitative interview among private sector representatives in 2017 suggest that employers face skills shortages, particularly in areas of work ethics, motivation, and problem solving. The magnitude of skills shortages in Moldova is the highest in the Europe and Central Asia region. The Moldovan labor market will benefit from an increased supply of employees, including new recruits, with a range of relevant socioemotional as well as cognitive capabilities. This report provides a first diagnostic of socioemotional skills in Moldova to profile the skills composition of grade 9 students, identify learning context measures that are strongly associated with socioemotional skills, and clarify options for policy makers and practitioners to foster socioemotional skills. To this end, the Moldovan Socioemotional Skills Assessment was launched in April 2019. This assessment focused on grade 9 students to better understand how much socioemotional skills students exiting the end of the compulsory school cycle self-reported, and how these skills were associated with learning inputs from schools and families. This assessment was the first to evaluate a range of socioemotional skills among school-age children in Moldova, using measures that had been validated internationally. The measures were designed to capture five broad domains of socioemotional skills, including students’ self-reported capacity to ‘work with others’, ‘care for others’, ‘engage with others’, ‘explore new horizons’, and ‘manage emotions. The assessment provided not only technical validation of the measurement tools in Moldova but also initial guidance for policies and practices to foster these skills. The results suggest that such measurement tools can be mobilized in Moldova in the future.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Moldova Socioemotional Skills Assessment
title_short Moldova Socioemotional Skills Assessment
title_full Moldova Socioemotional Skills Assessment
title_fullStr Moldova Socioemotional Skills Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Moldova Socioemotional Skills Assessment
title_sort moldova socioemotional skills assessment
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/126081570163253927/Moldova-Socioemotional-Skills-Assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32514
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