Enacting strategies for graduate employability: How universities can best support students to develop generic skills

This project responded to growing social and economic demands for higher education graduates who can negotiate rapidly transforming employment contexts. It was based on the premise that higher education institutions have responsibility for helping students gain the skills, knowledge and personal att...

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Main Authors: Bennett, Dawn, Richardson, S., MacKinnon, P.
Format: Report
Published: Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56363
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author Bennett, Dawn
Richardson, S.
MacKinnon, P.
author_facet Bennett, Dawn
Richardson, S.
MacKinnon, P.
author_sort Bennett, Dawn
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This project responded to growing social and economic demands for higher education graduates who can negotiate rapidly transforming employment contexts. It was based on the premise that higher education institutions have responsibility for helping students gain the skills, knowledge and personal attributes required of them in the initial stages of their careers. The project emerged from the understanding that despite evidence on what is required by employers, the existence of graduate attributes statements, and a large body of scholarly literature, many graduates are not optimally work ready (Fullan & Scott, 2014). The project was implemented in parallel with two other commissioned projects on graduate employability. Recognising that the number of part-time, casual and/or multiple job-holding workers has never been higher and that traditional forms of employment are increasingly rare, this project focused on disciplines with ill-defined or difficult-to-enter graduate destinations. These included music and dance; biomedical sciences and biotechnology; professional and creative writing; and computer science. In contrast to the employer focus of the other projects, the team focused on students, graduates and academic leaders.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-563632022-11-21T05:14:10Z Enacting strategies for graduate employability: How universities can best support students to develop generic skills Bennett, Dawn Richardson, S. MacKinnon, P. This project responded to growing social and economic demands for higher education graduates who can negotiate rapidly transforming employment contexts. It was based on the premise that higher education institutions have responsibility for helping students gain the skills, knowledge and personal attributes required of them in the initial stages of their careers. The project emerged from the understanding that despite evidence on what is required by employers, the existence of graduate attributes statements, and a large body of scholarly literature, many graduates are not optimally work ready (Fullan & Scott, 2014). The project was implemented in parallel with two other commissioned projects on graduate employability. Recognising that the number of part-time, casual and/or multiple job-holding workers has never been higher and that traditional forms of employment are increasingly rare, this project focused on disciplines with ill-defined or difficult-to-enter graduate destinations. These included music and dance; biomedical sciences and biotechnology; professional and creative writing; and computer science. In contrast to the employer focus of the other projects, the team focused on students, graduates and academic leaders. 2016 Report http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56363 Australian Government Office for Learning and Teaching restricted
spellingShingle Bennett, Dawn
Richardson, S.
MacKinnon, P.
Enacting strategies for graduate employability: How universities can best support students to develop generic skills
title Enacting strategies for graduate employability: How universities can best support students to develop generic skills
title_full Enacting strategies for graduate employability: How universities can best support students to develop generic skills
title_fullStr Enacting strategies for graduate employability: How universities can best support students to develop generic skills
title_full_unstemmed Enacting strategies for graduate employability: How universities can best support students to develop generic skills
title_short Enacting strategies for graduate employability: How universities can best support students to develop generic skills
title_sort enacting strategies for graduate employability: how universities can best support students to develop generic skills
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/56363