Title: Enhancing Student Employability Coordination Team
1Enhancing Student Employability Co-ordination Team
- Lee Harvey (Deputy Director)
- September 2003
2ESECT people
- David Baume, independent evaluator
- Val Butcher, LTSN Generic Centre
- Carl Gilleard, Association of Graduate Recruiters
- Margaret Dane, Association of Graduate Careers
Advisory Services - David Gosling, National Co-ordination Team
- Lee Harvey, Sheffield Hallam University
- Sophie Holmes, National Union of Students
- Peter Knight, Open University
- Brenda Little, Open University
- Rob Ward, Centre for Recording Achievement
- Mantz Yorke, Liverpool John Moores University
3ESECT purpose
- To enhance student employability
- Context
- Widening participation
- Graduate contribution, graduate premium
- Too many graduates? Non-graduate jobs
- Part-time/extracurricular working
- Recruitment strategies
4What is employability?
5Definition and operationalisation
- Range of definitions
- Lack of distinction between definition and
indicator - Almost no serious operationalisation of the
concept
6Employability definitions
Getting a job
Getting a graduate job
Getting and retaining a graduate job
Getting and retaining a graduate job progressing
These alternatives are moving towards indicators
that specify the nature, timing and acquisition
of a job. At its crudest we end up with
graduation rates from institutions as a measure
of employability
7Magic bullet
HEI
Employability development opportunities
graduate
employability
employment
8Employability
- Employment rates of graduates ? employability.
- Development of the individual.
- HE and extracurricular activity.
9Employability definitions
Developing a range of attributes to become a
critical lifelong learner
Developing a range of attributes employers want
Developing a range of attributes necessary for
career progression
Exhibiting a range of attributes that employers
anticipate will be necessary for the future
effective functioning of their organisation
These alternatives are moving towards identifying
indicators that specify the development of
attributes. This takes us towards an audit of
employability-development opportunities
10Model
Subject area
Employability development opportunities
HEI
pedagogy
Graduate
engagement
- employability attributes
- self-promotional skills
- willingness to develop
Extra-curricular experiences
reflection
Employability
External factors
articulation
Recruitment process
Employment
Employer
11The ESECT view of employability
12The ESECT mission
- Challenge the idea that it is employability
versus education rather, employability is
enhanced by good learning. - Promote integrated approaches to employability.
- Help employers to recruit well from the diversity
of talent. - Help students know what this means for them
emphasise reflection - Pass a strong legacy to the HE Academy in 2005.
13A. Allay academics fears
- Fear employability is toxic to academic
values. - Our achievement will be to
- Show teachers in HE, through evidence and
academic concepts, that synergies are possible.
The Learning and Employability series does this. - Set out principles for programme design that can
reconcile the two. - Provide tools to help them.
14B. Encourage integrated approaches
- ESECT aims to show HEIs and partner organisations
ways of supporting employability - Throughout programmes of study and the student
life-cycle. - By getting students to reflect on and document
in- and out-of-class achievements - Personal Development Planning is going to be
important here.
15C. Help employers
- The Association of Graduate Recruiters will work
with its 600 members to encourage equity and
diversity in recruitment. - We work with CRAC, STEP and Shell LiveWire to
reach SMEs. - Regional activities are important ways of helping
higher education institutions to imagine ways of
influencing recruitment practices. (Variable
regional infrastructures)
16D. Help students
- NUS will raise student unions capacity to
contribute to employability. - ESECT is sensitive to the Access to What?
projects findings on combating patterns of
disadvantage. - ESECT will raise students capacity to represent
their achievements through - Promoting effective PDP practice.
- Helping departments and institutions create
critical reflective learners.
17E. A living legacy
- ESECT will link employability with key issues
PDP, teaching and learning, widening
participation, e-learning, assessment. - ESECT is working with LTSN subject centres, the
HE Academy and institutional change agents to
build a firm basis for enhancing employability in
the future. Not just another passing initiative! - We are generating briefings and toolkits on what
works.
18ESECTs work five phases
- Phase 1. What is known? The Perspectives series.
- Phase 2. Briefings for eight client groups.
- Phase 3. Dissemination activities, including
regional conferences. - Phase 4. Development of materials designed to
help the eight sets of clients to make a
difference. - Phase 5. Training in using, customising and
disseminating these materials.
19Client groups
- LTSN subject centres.
- Heads of department.
- Careers services.
- Student Unions.
- Employers.
- Pro-Vice-Chancellors.
- Curriculum and other development projects.
- Educational developers.
- All routes to learners and teachers
20Making a difference
- Our fourth set of deliverables.
- Originally described as toolkits.
- They could contain
- Audit tools.
- Examples of practice elsewhere.
- Suggestions and prompt lists.
- Access to an enhanced resource data-base.
- And
- Help and suggestions welcome.
21Learning more
- Contact Peter Knight by email (peter.knight_at_open.a
c.uk) - Contact Val Butcher by email (val.butcher_at_ltsn.ac.
uk) - Visit the LTSN Generic Centre/ESECT website
www.ltsn.ac.uk/genericcentre/ESECT
22Contacts
- Lee Harvey lee.harvey_at_shu.ac.uk
- CRE website has links to ESECT and other
employability materials including Transition to
work electronic version, with embedded sites,
as a word file on - http//www.shu.ac.uk/cre/employability