Continuing Vocational Training Survey

Updated: 16 June 2022

Next update: Not yet determined

Share of enterprises providing external courses for their employees
Share of enterprises providing external courses for their employees
2020
60.4
%
Share of enterprises that offer training courses and other forms of continual vocational training, after number of employees
Share of enterprises that offer training courses and other forms of continual vocational training, after number of employees
2020
Total10-49 employees50-249 employees250 employees and more
Courses or other forms of continuing vocational training in total93.092.295.999.3
Courses in total79.076.988.094.4
Other forms of continuing vocational training in total84.483.189.797.0
Internal courses65.662.678.090.2
External courses60.456.976.280.1
Explanation of symbols

Selected tables and charts from this statistics

  • Share of enterprises that offer training courses and other forms of continual vocational training, by type of training and industry
    Share of enterprises that offer training courses and other forms of continual vocational training, by type of training and industry
    2020
    Courses or other forms of continuing vocational training in totalCourses in totalOther forms of continuing vocational training in totalInternal coursesExternal courses
    Total93.079.084.465.660.4
    Mining and quarrying98.685.892.969.876.5
    Manufacturing91.776.981.460.561.0
    Electricity and gas, water supply, sewerage, waste100.095.793.982.982.1
    Construction88.472.577.453.665.8
    Wholesale and retail trade93.780.084.566.950.4
    Transportation and storage90.380.976.561.362.7
    Accommodation and food service activities94.861.987.755.130.8
    Information and communication98.487.396.478.069.8
    Financial and insurance activities100.095.3100.087.287.2
    Real estate activities: professional, scientific and technical activities: administrative and support service activities: arts, entertainment and recreation: other service activities94.188.087.778.173.7
    Explanation of symbols
  • Main skills needed for the development of the enterprise, as share of enterprises by type of skill and number of employees
    Main skills needed for the development of the enterprise, as share of enterprises by type of skill and number of employees
    2020
    Total10-49 employees50-249 employees250 employees and more
    General IT skills23.222.825.621.9
    IT professional skills12.010.319.524.9
    Management skills28.126.931.744.0
    Team working skills47.047.345.642.3
    Customer handling skills49.352.334.239.0
    Problem solving skills36.037.927.128.3
    Office administration skills0.70.61.1.
    Foreign language skills2.82.55.21.2
    Technical, practical or job-specific skills58.857.663.767.1
    Oral or written communication skills16.316.217.513.1
    Numeracy and/or literacy skills4.45.01.21.4
    Other skills not listed above16.615.821.115.1
    Explanation of symbols
  • Strategies for meeting skill needs, share of enterprises by type of industry
    Strategies for meeting skill needs, share of enterprises by type of industry
    2020
    Continuing vocational training of current staffRecruitment of new staff with the suitable qualifications, skills and competencesRecruitment of new staff combined with specific trainingInternal reogranisation to better use existing skills and competences
    Total93.476.552.761.6
    Mining and quarrying93.488.746.173.6
    Manufacturing93.778.351.765.6
    Electricity and gas, water supply, sewerage, waste97.788.853.769.1
    Construction91.475.644.263.9
    Wholesale and retail trade95.065.755.266.7
    Transportation and storage95.872.957.865.5
    Accommodation and food service activities84.472.957.055.1
    Information and communication95.092.251.053.7
    Financial and insurance activities99.793.266.370.8
    Real estate activities: professional, scientific and technical activities: administrative and support service activities: arts, entertainment and recreation: other service activities95.584.754.353.5
    Explanation of symbols

About the statistics

Statistics Norway carries out the survey Continuing vocational training survey (CVTS) every fifth year. The purpose of the survey is to give insight into the extent of courses and other forms of continuing vocational training among Norwegian businesses. Additionally, the enterprises receive questions tied to skill needs, training strategies as well as factors limiting the provision of vocational training.

Enterprises

In the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC2007) an enterprise is defined as the smallest combination of juridical units that produces goods and services, and that to a certain extent has independent decision making powers. In this statistic one juridical unit is treated as one enterprise.

Firms

The results from 2005 uses firms as its statistical unit. Where enterprises are the smallest juridical and economical unit, firm refers to a local branch unit. This is a production unit categorized by the kind of economic activity that the firm undertakes.

Industry

Enterprises are grouped after the most important activity in the enterprises. Enterprises can be grouped at different levels of detail. This statistic shows results by section of industry.

Training

In this survey we define training activities as planned activities that are mainly with the purpose of attaining new skills, or further development of existing skills. In order to be counted as a training activity it has to be an actual activity that is separate from the ordinary work in the enterprise.

Courses

Course activities are usually training activities that are clearly separate from the day to day work situation for the participants and are, as a rule, organised for a larger group of participants. In this statistic we differentiate between internal courses, that are organised by employees of the enterprises, and external courses¸ that are organised by persons outside the enterprise.

Industry classification follows the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC2007).

Name: Continuing vocational training survey

Topic: Education

Not yet determined

Division for Education and Culture Statistics

Results from the survey are solely published at national level.

Results from the survey are published each fifth year.

The 2022 publication concerns results for 2020. The survey was carried out in the period from May to July in 2021.

Statistics Norway delivers micro data from the survey to Eurostat.

Collected and revised data are stored securely by Statistics Norway in compliance with applicable legislation on data processing.

Statistics Norway can grant access to the source data (de-identified or anonymised microdata) on which the statistics are based, for researchers and public authorities for the purposes of preparing statistical results and analyses. Access can be granted upon application and subject to conditions. Refer to the details about this at Access to data from Statistics Norway.

The purpose of the survey is to map the extent of vocational training in enterprises, and how the enterprises plan, execute and evaluate training for their employees.

This survey is the Norwegian part of the European survey Continuing Vocationl Training Survey that has been carried out since 1994. Norway has participated in the survey every fifth year since 2000. The survey is part of a larger effort to study adult learning.

Results from the survey give relevant authorities and other interested parties information about training efforts and skill needs in enterprises. In this way the statistic contributes to foundational knowledge for the shaping of policy, both in Norway and in Europe.

Some important users are among others the Norwegian Directorate for Higher Education and Skills, International organisations, employers organisations, trade unions, scientists and the media.

No external users have access to statistics before they are released at 8 a.m. on ssb.no after at least three months’ advance notice in the release calendar. This is one of the most important principles in Statistics Norway for ensuring the equal treatment of users.

CVTS is a part of Statistics Norway’s work to examine adult learning. For data from surveys which concern adult learning from the perspective of the individual we refer to the statistics Lifelong learning and Adult education. The term “learning” in this statistic is, however, not directly comparable with its usage in these two other surveys. In contrast to these, CVTS does not differentiate between formal education and non-formal education.

Results from the survey are also utilized in the Labour costs statistic.

The statistics are developed, produced and disseminated pursuant to Act no. 32 of 21 June 2019 relating to official statistics and Statistics Norway (the Statistics Act).

The CVTS survey is regulated under the Regulation (EU) 1552/2005 on statistics relating to vocational training in enterprises. and is implemented after the Commission Regulation (EU) No 198/2006 and 1153/2014.

The survey is sent to a sample of enterprises in both private and public sectors. The criteria for being in the sampling population is that it must be an enterprise with at least 10 employees belonging to one of the following industries:

  • Mining and quarrying
  • Manufacturing
  • Electricity and gas supply
  • Water supply, sewerage, waste
  • Construction
  • Domestic trade, car repair shop
  • Transportation and storage
  • Accommodation, food service
  • Information and communication
  • Financial and insurance activities
  • Real estate activities
  • Professional, scientific and technical activities
  • Administrative and support service activities
  • Arts, entertainment and recreation
  • Other service activities

Results for CVTS are collected through a survey based on a representative sample

The survey for 2020 was based on a sample of 3 127 enterprises. The final number of valid responses from the enterprises was 2 283.

The survey for 2015 was based on a sample of 3 539 enterprises. The final number of valid responses from the enterprises was 2 332.

Responses to the survey are collected with the help of a web questionnaire. Enterprises that did not respond, or no longer is part of the sample population, are not replaced by other enterprises in the sample.

Editing is defined here as checking, examining and amending data. Automated routines for preventing wrong answers and/or wrong registering of answers are implemented in the web questionnaire. For CVTS the data are also controlled with special made tools from Eurostat that test for valid values on specific variables, logical consistency between variables and unusually low or high values on different indicators.

Statistics Norway calculates weights for estimating population totals. The weights are calculated based on the number of responses to the survey and the total number of enterprises in the population. The weights are then adjusted by calibrating these to known population totals for industry groups and size groups. This is done so that the estimated population totals for enterprises match the known population totals for each of the different industry and size groups.

Not relevant.

Employees of Statistics Norway have a duty of confidentiality.

Statistics Norway does not publish figures if there is a risk of the respondent’s contribution being identified. This means that, as a general rule, figures are not published if fewer than three units form the basis of a cell in a table or if the contribution of one or two respondents constitutes a very large part of the cell total.

Statistics Norway can make exceptions to the general rule if deemed necessary to meet the requirements of the EEA agreement, if the respondent is a public authority, if the respondent has consented to this, or when the information disclosed is openly accessible to the public.

More information can be found on Statistics Norway’s website under Methods in official statistics, in the ‘Confidentiality’ section.

The results from 2005 are not directly comparable with later rounds of the survey due to changes in the statistical unit from, firm to enterprise, between the survey for 2005 and the survey for 2010. An enterprise can consist of several firms and results for enterprises are thus not comparable with results for firms.

Starting with 2020 enterprises from the banking sector were included in the sampling frame for the survey. These banks were omitted in previous rounds of the survey. This means that the results for industry group “K”, which the banking sector is part of, not is completely comparable with previous rounds as there is a more diverse group of enterprises in the sampling frame for that industry group than previously.

To ensure that results are comparable between countries, the participating countries implements the survey based on the same guidelines made by Eurostat.

Eurostat publish international results from all participating countries. These are available in Eurostat’s Data Browser.

In the 2020 survey there were 3 127 enterprises in the sample for the survey. The sample is the group of enterprises that receive the survey questionnaire. During the time the survey was in the field we received 2 283 valid responses to the survey which gave a response rate of 73 percent.

In the 2015 survey there were 3 539 enterprises in the sample for the survey. The sample is the group of enterprises that receive the survey questionnaire. During the time the survey was in the field we received 2 332 valid responses to the survey which gave a response rate of 66 percent.

A high rate of survey non-response could be a possible source of errors if it leads to a skewed distribution in responses. For example, skewness could entail a large difference in the distribution of a known trait, such as industry classification, between the response data set and the sample frame. Skewness entails that the results are not fully representative for the target population.

A revision is a planned change to figures that have already been published, for example when releasing final figures as a follow-up to published preliminary figures. See also Statistics Norway’s principles for revisions.

A quality report for the survey is accessible on Eurostat’s web page.

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