Research from the Dynamo Academy and the experience of Vincenzo Falabella, national president of the Italian disability outreach federation FISH (Federazione Italiana per il Superamento dell’Handicap) indict the pandemic for a yearlong profectus interruptus undermining the headway made in Italy to include people with disabilities and pathologies in the labour market. Where should we recommence?
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September in Italy will see Italian universities reopening lecture halls with special safety measures, though students may also opt to continue attending lectures remotely.
Talking about oneself and one’s business is as vital for companies as it is for people. However, if storytelling is an innate human experience, it is certainly not always enough. Becoming a storyteller requires honing one’s skills and a long process of study and practice.
The health emergency has also revolutionised the world of education, throwing up challenges that are not easy to deal with, yet at the same time opening up new, unprecedented opportunities. Even the skills expected of teachers today appear to differ to some extent from the past. Here are the essential ones
Laura Sinatra (Eapitalia World): “companies struggle to talk about vulnerability. And this emerges as an issue when something unpleasant happens. That’s why we need prevention”.
Being able to navigate across disciplines, knowledge and cultures is a skill that is gaining ground in contrast to the past. This is one of the reasons, explains Giulio Xhaet, why universities and vocational schools have sprung up to teach and practice contamination
Post-pandemic labour market challenges will depend on investments in digital skills to boost Italy’s competitiveness
Minister Patrizio Bianchi outlined the course, designed within the framework to implement the UN’s 2030 Agenda, aiming to guide young people towards the 17 Sustainable Development Goals.
Whether Italian or elsewhere, the market is full of valuable offers: chock full of topics ranging from investigative journalism and historical reconstructions to economics and environmental issues. There is something for everyone.
The complexion of the food sector has changed since the pandemic, exemplified by the acceleration of certain innovative processes in large-scale retail and the rise of logistics. Viewpoints expressed by Michele Silvestri, Supply Chain Manger at Muller, and Debora Guma, CIO at Lactalis Italia
To make the most of your working life, you need to simplify, break old habits and start doing something truly relevant. Glickon CMO Carlo Rinaldi explains how it’s done.
We are not born writers, we are born talkers. We are quite literally ‘made of talk’. “But our talks are not all the same”, explains Chris Anderson, curator of the non-profit that runs the TED universe. Some talks focus on the ‘how’, others on the ‘when’. Yet it is only by focusing on the ‘why’ that they become effective.
Our country should stop selling cars with diesel or petrol engines by 2035 and switch to electric cars. New skills, new professional profiles and more research will be needed
“Psychology and the Good Life”, taught by Laurie Santos at Yale, has become the most popular course in the history of the prestigious American university. Yet there is no shortage of examples in Italy as well
Software developers, engineers and computer scientists will be leading the first phase of creating a virtual reality for avatars. But eventually a detailed world will have to be created, and this will only be possible with architects, designers, mathematicians and many other professional profiles.