Meeting the Needs: Rethinking Education and Gender Inclusion in Construction

The construction industry across Europe and the Western Balkans is facing a double challenge: a growing demand for workers on one side, and deep-rooted gender imbalances on the other. To address these issues, the Women Empowered in Construction (WEC) project has published its Needs Assessment Report – a roadmap that highlights what must change if the sector is to become both resilient and inclusive.

 

 

Why a Needs Assessment?

 

This report goes beyond identifying shortages. It asks: What exactly is missing in current systems? What do women need to succeed in construction? And what changes must educators, employers, and policymakers make to remove barriers?

 

The findings point to five priority areas for reform:

  1. Curriculum Relevance and Responsiveness

Construction training programmes are often out of sync with the realities of today’s sector. While technical foundations exist, they fail to reflect the skills needed for the green and digital transition.

What’s missing:

  • Green construction methods and energy-efficient retrofitting.
  • Digital site management tools (BIM, drones, 3D modelling).
  • Safety and compliance modules adapted to mixed-gender teams.

Recommendation: Develop modular, job-focused training units that prepare learners directly for the most in-demand roles.

 

  1. Gender-Sensitive Design and Delivery

Most training programmes still reproduce old stereotypes. Female role models, gender-aware teaching methods, and inclusive materials are rare, leaving women without visibility or support.

What’s missing:

  • Inclusive language in training.
  • Properly sized PPE and safe workplace facilities.
  • Case studies showing women in technical roles.

 

Recommendation: Embed gender inclusion at every stage, from course design to assessment.

 

  1. Stronger Education–Employment Bridges

Even where women are entering construction education, few make it into jobs. The pipeline “leaks” because schools and employers aren’t connected enough.

What’s missing:

  • Mentorship and job-shadowing opportunities.
  • Partnerships with inclusive employers.
  • Career guidance for non-traditional pathways.

Recommendation: Integrate real world work experience and direct employer engagement into every training module.

 

  1. Supporting Trainers and VET Providers

Inclusion doesn’t happen automatically. Teachers and institutions need both tools and incentives to deliver change.

What’s missing:

  • Training for educators in gender-sensitive pedagogy.
  • Resources for schools to implement inclusion strategies.
  • Recognition and reward for inclusive performance.

Recommendation: Launch a capacity-building programme for VET providers, giving educators the confidence and skills to transform classrooms.

 

  1. Policy and Advocacy Alignment

Educational change must be reinforced by policies that reward inclusive practices. Otherwise, progress will remain uneven between EU and Western Balkan countries.

What’s missing:

  • Gender-specific strategies in construction policy.
  • Integration of equality goals into accreditation and funding.
  • Incentives for inclusive hiring in public procurement.

Recommendation: Develop a policy annex to the curriculum, offering regulators and governments a toolkit to embed equality in labour and education systems.

 

 

Looking Ahead

 

Labour shortages and gender gaps cannot be solved in isolation. Both are symptoms of outdated systems that must be modernised. For WEC project, this means that the upcoming vocational curriculum (D3.2) will not simply deliver skills it will act as a transformative tool, reshaping how women are trained, supported, and integrated into construction. By embedding inclusion, digitalisation, and green skills from the start, the curriculum will do more than prepare workers. It will help reshape the sector itself into one that is sustainable, equitable, and future-ready.