These transversal skills – often called soft skills or transferable skills – help young people navigate life, build relationships, support their wellbeing, and thrive in education and employment.
For many young people, youth work provides some of the most formative experiences of their lives. However, until they have awareness and a language for their skills, they often don’t realise how much they’ve learned.
As Dr Ciarán Dunne, DCU Transversal Skills Director, said at the conference:
“We can’t unlock potential unless we become aware of the potential.”
This is exactly where Skills Summary comes into play.
Skills Summary is a framework and an online tool that captures, measures and builds understanding of the key transversal skills young people gain by participating in youth work and volunteering.
It helps young people:
- learn about transversal skills
- identify the transversal skills they develop in youth work
- put clear language on those skills
- reflect on their growth as it happens
- communicate their strengths to employers, education and training providers
The conference: A shared commitment to recognising skills developed through youth work
With that context in mind, the conference explored transversal skills through three lenses:
- Mental health and wellbeing
Speakers highlighted how transversal skills act as protective factors for young people.
- Employability and workforce pathways
Transversal skills are the backbone of employability and adaptability. They help young people navigate interviews, manage workplace expectations, collaborate effectively and grow confidently into adult roles.
- Education and lifelong learning
Universities and training providers increasingly recognise that transversal skills are essential. Embedding them in youth work and education creates stronger, more resilient learners.
A key message comes through clearly:
Youth work naturally builds these skills in rich, authentic ways, and young people benefit deeply when those skills are made visible.
Our conference highlights video brings together voices from the sector youth work sector and much wider. Reflecting on why transversal skills matter and how youth work is uniquely placed to develop them.
It’s a short, energising look at transversal skills and youth work in action, and the impact it has on young people’s lives.
Want to explore more? Full recordings of each keynote input are available.
If you’d like to dive deeper into the ideas shared at the conference, all keynote inputs and resources are available on our Skills Summary Conference Padlet>>>
These longer videos give you more detail on transversal skills in youth work, mental health, employability and education, and may be useful for planning, staff development or reflective practice.
Moving forward together
The conference left us with a clear sense of purpose: Ireland has an opportunity to strengthen transversal skills development across the youth sector – and youth work is central to that vision.
With the right tools, recognition and support structures, we can ensure that every young person who engages in youth work can confidently identify, articulate and apply the skills they develop.
That’s why we’ve started Skills Summary Network of Skills Champions. It’s a new community of practice for youth workers and those working with young people in the youth work sector.
Want to get involved? Email Mateja, Skills Summary Project Co-ordinator at mateja@nyci.ie.
If you don’t yet have an account on Skills Summary, you can sign up here:
Skills Summary sign-up for those working with young people>>>
Here’s to continuing the work in 2026, and to a future where every young person can see their own strengths clearly.