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Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 [email protected]
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Page 1: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Changing HE and the growth of Employability

Rachel Higdon – July 2012 [email protected]

Page 2: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

What is Employability?

Page 3: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Yorke 2006:5 

– Employability as demonstrated by the graduate actually obtaining a job

– Employability due to the student being developed by his or her experience of higher education (a curricular and perhaps extra-curricular process)

– Employability in terms of the possession of relevant achievements (and, implicitly, potential).”

Page 4: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Yorke

• “a set of achievements – skills, understandings and personal attributes – that make graduates more likely to gain employment and be successful in their chosen occupations”

Page 5: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Employability Agenda

Since Dearing Report (1997)

Page 6: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

What is the Employability agenda?

• Mandelson – Pushed “Civilisation and Competition” - HE to ensure undergraduates “acquired” employability to gain graduate jobs (BBC 2009)

• Coalition increases competition and marketisation of HE

Browne Review (2010) and White Paper (2011)

Page 7: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Browne Review 2011, White Paper 2011 and Wilson

Review 2012Link undergraduate courses directly to graduate jobs -Courses to develop employability for specific graduate jobs and show evidence through published material.

Page 8: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Little Difference between Labour and Coalition in terms of their

concept of employability

Dominant Models:Skill acquisition to meet employers’ needs

Human capital theory – links government policy and HE together with employment growth

Seek and value employers’ definition of graduate employability and employers’ view of current undergraduate provision

Page 9: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Little Difference• work placements and work experience key

requisite for graduate employability

• Graduate employability measured 6 months after graduation

• Believe HE and industry should work closer together to develop employability for graduate jobs within undergraduate degrees

• Student as consumer/student in driving seat/student voice – however little research (compared to employers ) with students

Page 10: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Research with Graduates

68 students from pre and post 1992 (graduating 2006-9)

Through blog with “The Guardian” and “Facebook”

Page 11: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Creative work

Creative work is not defined to one job – complicated

• Single artist may work in education, community sector and business worlds

• Work in SMES, self-employed, sole-trader, PAYE – mix of few or all

• Freelance, project, contracting, commissioning, paid on results etc

• Portfolio careers – Bit of everything all the time throughout career

Page 12: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Creative Employability

Page 13: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

The graduate View

Industry in the curriculum – professionals involved in the curriculum

Networking contacts – for creative stimulation, work opportunities and collaboration

Feedback from others in and outside the curriculum

Page 14: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

The graduate View Lecturers as practitioners – working and

teaching in the industry

Specific industry related skills - Theory and Practice

Modules and show case projects related to industry work

Experience – work experience, placements,

internships etc

Page 15: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

The graduate View

Careers advice and guidance tailored to the specific industry

Graduate attributes needed for work

Student reflection/identity in industry

Student’s potential as creative artist in industry

Page 16: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Obstacles?

• Money

• Contacts

Page 17: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Implications for Staff

What is your philosophy within your discipline?

What will this affect?

• Pedagogic practice (the way the subject is taught)

• Subject content (what is taught)

• Partnerships (who we need)

Page 18: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Employability is not getting a job

• Yes it seems employability can be enhanced as part of the degree experience.

• However getting a job has socio-economic

factors – class, race, gender, reputation of university, personal background and family histories, location, money etc etc

Page 19: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

References

Browne, J. (2010). Securing a sustainable future for higher education. Independent Review of Higher Education & Student Finance in England.

Department for Business Innovation and Skills (2011) Higher Education. Students at the Heart of the System

Higdon, R (2011) A grounded theory approach to employability, the creative economy and undergraduate degrees in British Universities. SRHE Annual conference.

Page 20: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Yorke, M. (2006). Employability in higher education: what it is-what it is not, Higher Education Academy.

Yorke, M. and P. Knight (2006). Embedding employability into the curriculum. York, The Higher Education Academy.

Wilson, T. (2012). A Review of Business-University Collaboration

Page 21: Changing HE and the growth of Employability Rachel Higdon – July 2012 rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk rhigdon@dmu.ac.uk.

Discussion