Independent People Erasmus Project
General information for the Independent People Erasmus Project
Project Title
Independent People
Project Key Action
This project related with these key action: Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices
Project Action Type
This project related with this action type : Strategic Partnerships for youth
Project Call Year
This project’s Call Year is 2020
Project Topics
This project is related with these Project Topics: Access for disadvantaged; New innovative curricula/educational methods/development of training courses; Recognition (non-formal and informal learning/credits)
Project Summary
The KA2 strategic youth partnership “Independent People” is designed to identify effective non-formal approaches to developing and evidencing soft skills in the field of youth work, through the exchange of good practices between 3 partner organisations.
In the course of our organisational activities and a preliminary literature review, we have observed that disadvantaged young people often lack critical “soft skills”, such as self-confidence, resilience, motivation, and self-management. It is evident from our programmes that a significant number of the young people we work with require preliminary non-formal support to acquire and develop basic soft skills, before they are able to (re) engage in formal learning, participate fully in society, and progress into and within the world of work.
The central notion of Independent People is that soft skills are vital competences that young people need to possess and by capacity-building youth workers to deliver high quality support via non-formal learning approaches, we can help young people to acquire these skills more effectively.
By bringing together 3 highly experienced organisations (vzw aPart from Belgium, Karlstads Kommun from Sweden, and Humber Learning Consortium from the UK), all working with disadvantaged youth, we aim to approach non-formal soft skills development methodologies from a practitioner standpoint – whilst simultaneously involving and co-producing project results with target groups of young people on our respective programmes.
Independent People has 4 objectives, over 18 months:
1) To identify a common set of ‘soft skills’ that foster increased social inclusion of target groups of young people
2) To identify effective and successful non-formal approaches to developing a young person’s soft skills
3) To develop a user-friendly way of evidencing soft skills development
4) To develop youth work practitioners’ confidence in delivering non-formal soft skills development opportunities
These objectives are closely linked to delivery of the following results:
1) A common soft skills framework, providing the basis for:
2) A soft skills passport (in English, Swedish, and Dutch)
3) A web-based guide for youth workers on how to deliver soft skills / use the passport (in English, Swedish, Dutch)
The project will achieve its objectives and results through a combination of:
1) Coordinated local activities involving youth workers and young people
2) Virtual practitioner collaboration to share approaches and learning across the partnership
3) 3 x 4-day teaching and learning activities in each partner country with a total of 48 youth work practitioner mobilities (plus host staff and young people)
4) Coordinated local activities and virtual collaboration to develop and test a soft skills passport and web-based practitioner guide (practitioners and young people)
5) 2 x 2.5 day transnational partnership meetings (at the beginning and end of the project)
The soft skills passport and web-based practitioner guide will be thoroughly disseminated and made freely accessible on the strategic partnership’s website and the Erasmus+ Results Platform.
Our aspiration is to make an impact at:
1) individual level; by increasing participating youth workers’ confidence and expertise in delivering soft skills
2) organisational level; by increasing each partners’ capacity and competence to work transnationally, upskilling the workforce, and creating resources to help improve outcomes for young people (i.e. passport, web-guide)
3) partnership level; by developing appetite and capacity to undertake future joint work, e.g. spin-off KA1 youth mobilities and staff mobility projects
4) sectoral level; by creating 2 open access results (the soft skills passport and practitioner web-guide) that can be adopted and adapted by other youth work organisations
EU Grant (Eur)
Funding of the project from EU: 54632 Eur
Project Coordinator
Humber Learning Consortium & Country: UK
Project Partners
- aPart vzw
- Karlstads kommun

