The Council of Europe HELP Programme conducts training-of-trainers (ToT) sessions, to ensure high-quality and harmonised implementation of the HELP online courses. The HELP ToT sessions equip future HELP tutors with technical skills to implement a HELP tutored course on the HELP online platform in line with the HELP Training Methodology.

 

Candidates for the HELP ToTs are selected jointly with the HELP Network members, namely by the national training institutions for judges and prosecutors and Bar associations, on the basis of their background and professional experience.

 

Candidates for the ToTs are selected in strict co-operation with the HELP Network members and other national partners on the basis of their background and professional experience.

 

Successful participants in the ToTs are certified by the Council of Europe HELP Programme and are inserted in a list of certified HELP tutors.  

 

Access the list of certified HELP tutors

The HELP methodology and resources are systematically used in all Council of Europe capacity building activities on the ECHR, organised in the beneficiary countries, including within the framework of EU/CoE Joint Programmes.

HELP organises train the trainers sessions, with the aim to increase ownership by national training institutions.
The HELP methodology takes into account the heavy time pressure imposed on legal professionals in their daily work. Its added value is that curricula are drafted on a tailor-made basis, meeting participants’ specific training needs and learning pace, allowing flexibility.

Training materials are designed by international experts, with the purpose to develop cognitive abilities including understanding, procedural and mental skills allowing legal practitioners to put into practice the acquired knowledge in concrete situations. A model curriculum is a full-fledged interactive course, composed of modules addressing sub-topics.

Curricula are developed according to learning objectives. Those reflect the minimum level of requirements expected by the end of the course.

A master curriculum is then adapted by a national tutor to the national legislation and to the type of legal professionals. He/she will also draft a chapter on the implementation of EU provisions and case law at the domestic level.

Interdisciplinary courses including other professionals may be launched under the project (health and medical specialists, etc.).

After the course, an evaluation of the materials is carried out, on the basis of the participants and the tutor’s feedback. The course is also assessed by taking into account the failure rate of assignments, case studies, etc. This ensures that the final curriculum is of high quality and can then be converted it into a self-learning resource, available to any legal professional/user of the HELP platform.

Within a same group, the level of knowledge and interest may differ. That is why each curriculum displays at one level mandatory resources (minimum prerequisites) and optional additional resources for those willing to go further into details.

Furthermore curricula may be integrated in the national programmes of NTIs/BAs as a mandatory training on fundamental rights. In the long term NTIs/BAs will develop curricula in line with the HELP methodology and closer to national users’ needs.

The HELP methodology is cost effective, as distance-learning is less expensive than traditional training through the development of distance and blended learning curricula and their delivery. Indeed, the same materials can be used for many sessions and by a large number of participants.

An average distance learning course lasts 3 months, with a new module being published by the tutor every two weeks.

The main steps can be described as follows:

  • Identification of the topic together with national partners;
  • Selection of the countries where a pilot course will be launched;
  • Selection of the target audience (judges, lawyers, prosecutors or interdisciplinary groups);
  • Selection of experts in charge of the master curriculum;
  • Organisation of 3 working group meetings to allow experts to agree on a curriculum outline and methodology; to share the workload and modules according to background and expertise;
  • Definition of learning objectives;
  • Draft the master course’s curriculum;
  • Develop interactive tools and assignments (e-learning design);
  • Translation of documents in the national languages;
  • Selection of the national tutor trained on the HELP methodology;
  • Decision on the format of the course (blended or distance learning);
  • Adaptation of the master course to the national legal order by the tutor;
  • Selection of participants by the tutor together with the national training institution;
  • Implementation of the course in the pilot countries;
  • Evaluation of the courses and of their effectiveness;
  • Joint certification delivered by the NTI/BA and HELP;
  • Revision of the master course according to the evaluation;
  • Use of the master course as a self-training material available on the HELP website.