Global Skills Taxonomy Adoption Toolkit 2025
Page 34 of 47 · WEF_Global_Skills_Taxonomy_Adoption_Toolkit_2025.pdf
Cross-walking skills taxonomies is essential
for aligning on a common language of skills and fostering collaboration among stakehold-ers. For example, cross-walking taxonomies can allow to bridge the disconnect that some-times exists between youth and adult learning, demonstrating how the skills acquired during school years continue to evolve in the work-place.
The World Economic Forum’s Education 4.0
Taxonomy defines the abilities, skills and at-titudes needed for a future-ready education system. Fully aligned with the Forum’s Glob-al Skills Taxonomy, it ensures a consistent framework that connects early education to workplace-relevant skills, offering a continu-ous development pathway from school to ca-reer. The following is an example for a group of skills:
4Key insight 11: How to cross-walk skills taxonomies
Working with others Teaching, mentoring and coaching
Leadership and social influenceMentoring
Coaching
Persuasion and negotiation
Liaising, networking and ex-changing information
Building trust
Ethical leadershipL1 Abilities & Skills / L2 Social (Interpersonal)
L1 Abilities & Skills / L2 Social
(Interpersonal)
L1 Abilities & Skills / L2 Social
(Interpersonal) / L3 Negotiation
L1 Abilities & Skills / L2 Social
(Interpersonal) / L3 Collaboration
L1 Abilities & Skills / L2 Social
(Interpersonal) / L3 Negotiation
L1 Attitudes & Values / L2 So-
cietal (Extra-personal) / L3 Civic ResponsibilityGlobal Skills
Taxonomy Level 2Global Skills
Taxonomy Level 3Global Skills Taxonomy Level 4 Education 4.0 Skills Taxonomy
Global Skills Taxonomy Adoption Toolkit
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