Building A Stronger Bridge Between Adult Education and Careers
In the field of professional development, a common assumption guides policy and practice: more training leads to more opportunity.
Yet recent discussions across Europe suggest that the relationship between training and employability is not only about quantity, but also about quality, relevance, and effective design.
A recent investigative report by DER SPIEGEL has sparked an important debate about how adult education programs can best support job seekers. In Germany, billions of euros are invested annually in training opportunities. At the same time, some participants report that certain programs do not sufficiently reflect current labor market realities or individual career needs.
One participant quoted in the article described feeling “parked” in a course that did not appear closely connected to emerging professional opportunities. While such experiences do not represent the full picture of adult education, they highlight the importance of continuously improving how programs are designed, implemented, and evaluated.
The Evidence: High-Quality Training Works
Encouragingly, research highlighted by the Joint Research Centre (JRC) demonstrates that well-designed training programs can significantly improve employment outcomes. In particular, targeted and high-quality short-term training initiatives have been shown to increase employment rates by about 5% within one year.
This evidence reinforces a key insight: adult education can be a powerful driver of social mobility when learning opportunities are aligned with real skills needs and individual development pathways.
From Participation to Impact
Today, the discussion is not only about how many people participate in training, but also about how effectively training supports future careers.
Research and practical experience show that three elements are especially important:
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- Relevant content: Training should reflect the skills that are needed in today’s labour market, including digital skills, green skills, and practical competencies that employers are looking for.
- Human-centered learning: Each learner has different experiences, strengths, and goals. Training programs are more effective when they recognise these differences and support individual learning paths.
- Guidance and connection to real opportunities: Support such as mentoring, coaching, and career guidance helps learners understand how new skills can be used in practice and applied in real jobs.
The DIAMOND Mission
The DIAMOND Empower project explores how adult education can build a bridge between adult education and advancements in people’s careers.
Through our development of tools like the ᴱGROW Index and MOVEᴱ, the project supports human-centered, personalized learning pathways that help individuals connect their skills with career opportunities.
We believe that for adult education to be effective, it must be flexible enough to adapt to the individual’s real needs and the market’s real demands.
Because learning is not about filling time – it is about unlocking potential and creating opportunity.
Learn more about our research and our mission to reshape adult learning at: diamond-empower.eu
Sources:
- DER SPIEGEL: Why so many job seekers end up in expensive and useless courses
- European Commission’s JRC: Are training programmes successful in improving labour market performance?
Funding Agency: European Research Executive Agency (REA)

