INCES and the Fedecamaras Education Commission propose joint work

Representatives of INCES and the Fedecamaras Education Commission
Press

Published at: 21/05/2026 10:00 PM

The National Institute for Socialist Training and Education (INCES) and the Fedecamaras Education Commission agreed this Tuesday, at the institute's headquarters, to recover business trust, the positioning of competency-based training and the incorporation of Inces into the federation's information spaces. The meeting was led by the president of the commission and first vice-president of Fedecamaras, Tiziana Polezel, and the president of INCES, Wuikelman Ángel.

At the beginning of the meeting, Ángel explained that the institute is working on the permanent expansion of its curriculum, based on the international parameters of the UNESCO UNEVOC network, and achieved the installation of an online system that allows monitoring in real time the activity and statistics of Inces throughout the country. The president explained that INCES went beyond traditional courses and adopted a renewed management model in the face of changes in the world of work.

For his part, Polezel noted that those associated with the chambers expressed their intention to contribute to the Inces training spaces. The vice-president applauded Ángel's explanation of competency-based training according to the catalog of occupations in Venezuela and insisted that Inces graduates highly trained personnel.

Polezel presented the ten strategic objectives of Fedecamaras, among which education ranks first. The commission prioritized addressing this issue with special attention to the construction, hydrocarbons and tourism sectors; the latter is emerging as one of the most important and with the highest investment expectations in the country. Dual training and the incorporation of young people into work for the first time were recurring themes.

The first vice-president of Fedecamaras revealed that this body has received investors over the past two months and that there are three recurring questions and they have to do with legal security, the Organic Labor Law and training. This last reason motivated the approach to INCES. The education commission stated that it needs training to take place within companies with their own personnel, but it also requires the incorporation of external people who provide new experiences and knowledge.

Both bodies agreed that Inces will, most likely on June 1, join a national meeting with all the representatives of the country's chambers to present the plan for relationship and approach to companies. Representatives from Conseturismo and Avavit also attended the meeting.

Mazo News Team

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