Albania 2024
Key takeaways
The Torino Process monitoring results in 2024 confirms that access to and participation in initial VET remain a strength in Albania. While VET is still perceived by some as less attractive than general education, many young learners enrol and progress successfully through initial VET programmes. Adult participation, however, remains limited. Continuing VET and other lifelong learning opportunities still lack the flexibility and relevance needed to engage older learners effectively, though recent reforms in active labour market programmes are expected to boost participation in the years ahead.
Albania continues to invest in strengthening the quality and relevance of VET learning outcomes. This includes initiatives to align programme content with labour market needs, update curricula, and promote innovation in teaching and training. Notable emphasis is placed on enhancing digital and green competences, which reflects the system’s readiness to address longer-term challenges. Nevertheless, labour market outcomes for youth remain modest, especially outside urban centres, due in part to a mismatch between training and employment opportunities. Adult learners, on the other hand, tend to demonstrate stronger foundational skills, suggesting potential to further develop adult education as a system asset.
Although Albania allocates substantial human and financial resources to its VET system, the effectiveness of these investments varies. The quality of training and learning materials remains a concern, and not all providers are equipped to use available resources effectively. Gaps in data collection and analysis also continue to limit evidence-based decision-making and hinder the dissemination of good practices. Addressing these issues—particularly through improvements in infrastructure, teacher development, and data systems—will be essential to supporting ongoing reforms and strengthening Albania’s role in international peer learning..
Access to learning
Monitoring in the area of access to and participation to learning helps countries assess the extent to which initial VET, continuing VET and other learning opportunities are accessible and attractive to all learners, regardless of their individual backgrounds or reasons for participating. The data also reflects how well learners can expect to progress through and graduate from these learning opportunities.
The Torino Process is a regular review of national systems of vocational education and training as well as adult education. It is designed to analyse the ways in which national VET systems (including adult education) address the challenges of human capital development in a lifelong learning perspective. It was established by the European Training Foundation (ETF) in 2010 and has been carried out in partner countries in Southeastern Europe, Turkey, Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean ever since.
Monitoring in the context of the Torino Process describes the extent to which countries deliver on their commitments to learners in support of their learning through life (lifelong learning - LLL) in three major areas of policy and system performance: access to learning, quality of learning, and system organisation.
Quality of learning
Quality and relevance of learning is the area of monitoring that identifies how successfully the VET system provides basic skills and key competences to both young and adult learners. It highlights the relevance of VET programmes to the world of work and how effectively VET graduates transition into the labour market. Additionally, it monitors efforts to promote excellence across key domains, including pedagogy, professional development, programme content, governance, and social inclusion, as well as the openness of the VET system to innovation in response to the evolving needs of learners and labour markets.
While the VET system supports learner progression and graduation effectively, labour market outcomes continue to lag behind. The lower performance of youth compared to adults, and the mismatch between training and employer needs, underscore the importance of stronger links with the world of work. Encouragingly, reforms focused on innovation, lifelong learning, and green and digital skills are underway and hold promise for improving employability in the near future.
System organisation
System organisation is the area of monitoring that captures performance across various domains of management and administration. It examines whether practitioners and leaders have access to data and evidence to support informed decision-making, the level of stakeholder involvement in VET governance, the quality and capacity of staff in leadership positions, and the degree of internationalisation. Additionally, monitoring the allocation of human and financial resources to the VET system helps assess whether these resources effectively support teaching, training, and learning.
Promoting access and participation in opportunities for lifelong learning
Supporting quality and relevance of lifelong learning
Index of system performance
International comparability of performance results
In addition to presenting information on system performance, the Torino Process monitoring also looks at how internationally comparable a country’s results are, how much they may be affected by bias, and how self-critical a country is when reporting on its own performance. This is made possible by the methodology, which keeps detailed records of the evidence used to produce each country’s results—including where the data come from and how they were gathered. This applies to Albania as well.
Since 2023, the monitoring results for Albana have become more internationally comparable and now surpass the average level of comparability across all countries in the Torino Process sample. However, the results for Albania also remain susceptible to bias within the group of Torino Process countries. Albania also tends to self-assess the performance of its VET system more positively than other countries, on average.