Staff of 2030: Future-Ready Teaching

Educators around the world are trying to modernise schooling to better prepare young people for the 21st century. Personalised and self-directed learning, social and emotional skills, and “issuesbased” learning that explores linkages between subjects are just a few of the ways that progressive educators are working to equip young people for contemporary realities. At the same time, the teaching workforce is transforming as a new generation enters the profession and today’s working cohort ascends into management or begins to shape education policy.

Taking off the cost blinders: Finance and HR

In terms of core skills, the finance and HR functions could not be further apart. The former mandates numeracy, focusing on clear, quantitative metrics from profitability to asset valuation. The latter requires a deeper understanding of human behaviour to navigate more nuanced criteria such as employee satisfaction and motivation. 

Pride and prejudice: The future of advocacy

This report, the third in an annual series of Economist Intelligence Unit studies addressing the business and economic case for global LGBT diversity and inclusion (D&I), assesses the future prospects for corporate advocacy in the LGBT space, given the perils that face proponents of the liberal, open-minded worldview that underpins LGBT equality.

Preparing students for the future of work

Labour pains: Coming shifts in the world of work

The media and popular literature abound with visions of work in the future. Some are dystopian, foreseeing a workplace where software and machines perform most tasks and humans are thin on the ground. Others are benign, anticipating that current modes of work will survive well into the future, and that new technologies will make work and the workplace a more enjoyable experience than today. However, even those of the latter, more optimistic bent acknowledge that the path to the work future will be strewn with difficult realities that employers and employees will need to face up to.

Case study - Hong Kong: A home for the factories of the future?

In his 2016 policy address, Hong Kong Chief Executive CY Leung identified a number of future-focused industries - robotics, elderly care and financial technology - as potential growth drivers for Hong Kong in the years ahead.

Investing in future skills

Economists agree that the UK needs to close the “productivity gap” with countries like France and the United States. But to do that effectively requires trust, confidence, sustained commitment and shared responsibility, argues Dame Fiona Kendrick, Chairman and CEO of Nestlé UK and Ireland.

Inequality and the future of work

A new world of work is upon us, and families at the bottom of the income scale could be the least prepared to adjust to it, according to Diane Coyle, Professor of Economics at the University of Manchester.

Managing "always on": Mobility and the work-life balance in organisations

The era of the always-on workforce is upon us. Mobile technologies have created an environment of ubiquitous connectivity in which employees can be accessible at any time of the day, any day of the week.

Workforce of the future: Part 1

Part 1 of an EIU advisory board meeting discusses how companies balance retraining existing employees with hiring new talent  and how they can leverage tech skills of a multigenerational workforce.

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