GRADUATE EMPLOYABILITY AS AN INDICATOR OF INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

GRADUATE EMPLOYABILITY AS AN INDICATOR OF INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS:

Description:

GRADUATE EMPLOYABILITY AS AN INDICATOR OF INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS: A Case Study of NMMU Prof Heather Nel and Dr Annemarie Barnard Strategic and Institutional ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:91
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: aba114
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GRADUATE EMPLOYABILITY AS AN INDICATOR OF INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS:


1
GRADUATE EMPLOYABILITY AS AN INDICATOR OF
INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTIVENESS A Case Study of
NMMU Prof Heather Nel and Dr Annemarie
Barnard Strategic and Institutional Planning
Unit Centre for Planning and Institutional
Development
2
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
  • The purpose of this study was to analyse
    perceptions of NMMU graduates employers with
    respect to
  • Knowledge, attributes skills contributing to
    graduate employability
  • Extent to which NMMU qualifications/programmes
    equip graduates with required knowledge,
    attributes skills
  • The benefits of experiential learning
  • Aspects impacting on graduate employability

3
CONTEXT Effectiveness of higher education
  • The growing number of unemployed graduates
    globally is challenging the effectiveness of HE
    institutions in providing the requisite education
    for national development economic growth.
  • Graduate unemployment in SA increased by almost
    50 between 1995 2005 fastest growing
    unemployment rate among all education cohorts
    (MacGregor, 2007)
  • Higher education has a responsibility to its
    principal stakeholders students to equip them
    with more than a profound knowledge of an
    academic subject area. Higher education has a
    responsibility to students that includes
    encouraging and enabling them to develop, through
    their academic study, a range of explicit
    attributes, which allow them to subsequently
    engage effectively in the world of work (Stewart
    Knowles, 2000 2)

4
CONTEXT Higher education efficiency
effectiveness
  • Efficiency
  • Is higher education doing things right?
  • Examples of efficiency indicators (inputs
    process outputs)
  • Participation rates
  • Student staff ratios
  • Expenditure per student
  • Graduation rates
  • Research outputs
  • Effectiveness
  • Is higher education doing the right things right?
    What difference is it making?
  • Examples of effectiveness indicators
    (impact/outcomes)
  • Graduate employability employment rates
  • HE participation/graduation rates compared to
    national GDP
  • Educational attainment levels of population

5
On inputs and outputs/outcomes
students
graduates
efficiency
graduate employability
student progress (credits)
research outputs
educational attainment of population
staff
funding (public private)
national regional development/ economic growth
service outreach
attrition
student/ staff satisfaction
services
6
CONCEPTUALISING GRADUATE EMPLOYABILITY
  • Employability is taken as
  • a set of achievements skills, understandings
    and personal attributes that makes graduates
    more likely to gain employment and be successful
    in their chosen occupations, which benefits
    themselves, the workforce, the community and the
    economy
  • (Higher Education Council, Australia, 1992)
  • For the purposes of this study, graduate
    employability was conceptualised as
  • a set of achievements skills, understandings
    and personal attributes that makes graduates
    more likely to gain employment and be successful
    in their chosen occupations, which benefits
    themselves, the workforce, the community and the
    economy (Higher Education Council, Australia,
    1992)

7
LITERATURE REVIEW
  • Employability is not the same as employment
  • Capacity of the graduate to function effectively
    in a job it should not be confused with the
    acquisition of a job too many extraneous
    political, economic social factors impacting on
    employment
  • Employability as a curricular process
  • Curricula design should support the development
    of intellectual critical thinking skills that
    enable a graduate to fulfil a role not merely
    possessing the task-related skills that enable a
    graduate to do a specific job (Cox King, 2006)
  • Increasingly complex understandings by
    academics of generic graduate attributes how
    these inform curricula (Barrie, 2006)

8
LITERATURE REVIEW (cont.)
  • Employability as achievement and potential
  • HEIs are not always successful in preparing
    learners for the complexity of advanced knowledge
    economies symbolic analysts (Reich, 2002)
  • Undergraduate programmes should be concerned
    with
  • Abstraction (theorising relating empirical data
    to theory using formulae, equations, models
    metaphors)
  • Systems thinking (seeing the part in the context
    of the wider whole)
  • Experimentation (intuitively or analytically)
  • Collaboration (involving communication teamwork
    skills).

9
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
  • Data Collection and Sample
  • Quantitative qualitative methodologies
  • Graduate survey
  • 2005-2008 NMMU graduates 2841 in total
  • Non-probability convenience snowball sampling
    methods
  • Sampling frame NMMU alumni database
  • 2008 graduates were targeted at the graduation
    ceremonies in April
  • Employer interviews
  • Semi-structured, in-depth interviews with
    selected employers in E S Cape
  • Sampling frame all employers on the NMMU
    employer database
  • Purposive sampling - at least one representative
    per employment sector
  • 45 employer interviews conducted in total

10
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY GRADUATE SURVEY
YEAR OF GRADUATION PARTICIPANTS GRADUATES
2005 2.4 (68) 28.2 (6613)
2006 4.5 (195) 24.4 (5718)
2007 3.2 (91) 21.8 (5097)
2008 89.9 (2555) 25.6 (5994)
11
INTERPRETATION OF RESULTS
  • Cut points calculated by dividing the range of 4
    (5-1) into 4 equal intervals
  • 4.2 and above
  • 3.4 4.2
  • 2.6 3.4
  • less than 2.6
  • Percentages positive, negative neutral
  • Analysed for whole sample broken down further
    for relevant variables (e.g. year of graduation,
    faculty, qualification type, employment sector)
  • Open-ended responses
  • Recurring themes extracted from the interview
    data
  • Literature control triangulation enhance
    validity reliability

12
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Employment Status

13
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Employment Status
  • More than 75 of all respondents in full-time
    employment
  • 76.9 of 2008 respondents in full-time employment
  • Only 3.3 unemployed
  • Most respondents (81) employed in an occupation
    related to their qualification
  • 86.3 of respondents obtained their first jobs
    within six months after qualifying

14
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Employment status
  • Of the 3.3 who were unemployed at the time of
    the study, the reasons provided for unemployment
    included
  • More than a third (34.3) were studying further
  • The rest could not find employment due to the
    following reasons
  • Lack of work experience (25.8)
  • Lack of opportunities in field of study (14.3)
  • Not seeking employment (13.5)
  • Other common problems reported in finding
    employment included
  • Employment equity policies
  • Under-qualified
  • Over-qualified

15
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Recruitment and training
  • NMMU Graduate Recruitment Programme Graduate
    placement was amazing!
  • Some concerns expressed by employers
  • Graduates do not know how to prepare proper CVs
    when applying for a job
  • Employers feel that graduates should be better
    prepared for job interviews
  • Graduates do not seem to have sufficient career
    information and have very unrealistic
    expectations about the world of work
  • It takes graduates a long time to adapt and
    become fully functional in the workplace
  • Insufficient numbers of graduates in scarce
    skills areas (e.g. ICT)

16
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Experiential learning
  • Employers
  • 17 of the 45 employers in the sample currently
    offer opportunities for students to be placed for
    experiential or work-integrated learning
  • Employers appreciated the fact that some academic
    departments encourage feedback from industry
    (e.g. Engineering, IT)
  • Lack of trained workplace mentors problematic
    capacity constraints
  • Graduates
  • 82.2 of respondents who did not take part in
    experiential or work-integrated learning felt
    that it would have enhanced their employability
  • 87.4 of respondents agreed that academic staff
    should consult employers when designing or
    updating academic programmes/ curricula

17
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY Level
and type of qualification
  • More than half (59.7) of the respondents pursued
    further studies
  • 85.2 felt that their postgraduate studies
    enhanced their knowledge, skills competencies
    for their current job
  • Graduates in Science (70.3), Arts (68.4),
    Business (61.2), Education (61.2) most likely
    to study further
  • Graduates who obtained a four-year professional
    degree were the least likely to continue with
    further studies (34.4) e.g. Law
  • Emphasis placed by employers on employees
    engaging in continuing professional development
    lifelong learning obtaining a first
    qualification is no longer sufficient

18
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Graduate knowledge, skills attributes
  • 22 skills attributes rated according to (i)
    importance, (ii) extent to which graduates were
    equipped with these skills attributes at NMMU
  • All of the skills attributes rated by graduates
    as very important, with the exception of
    entrepreneurship (3.98)
  • Top 6 ratings professionalism (4.64) honesty
    (4.57) communication skills (4.53) problem
    solving (4.51) self-confidence (4.50) teamwork
    (4.49)
  • Best prepared through their studies honesty
    (4.47) professionalism (4.42) working
    independently (4.35) interpersonal skills
    (4.30) teamwork (4.30)
  • Effect size determine whether statistically
    significant differences are discrepancies of
    practical concern
  • Differences of moderate practical concern
    communication skills (d 0.56) presentation
    skills (d 0.51)

19
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Graduate knowledge, skills attributes
  • Employers expect graduates to be competent in the
    following skills
  • Communication
  • Interpersonal relations
  • Teamwork
  • Problem-solving analytical skills
  • Soft skills such as the ability to dress
    appropriately, basic good manners the ability
    to present themselves well
  • Computer literacy
  • Management skills (especially financial project
    management)
  • Administrative organisational skills

20
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Graduate knowledge, skills attributes
  • Employers seek out graduates with a range of
    personal attributes
  • Honesty integrity - professionalism behaving
    in an ethical manner
  • Self-assurance, including self-confidence,
    -awareness, -belief, -sufficiency, -direction
    -promotion labelled assertiveness by some
    employers
  • Ambition, including the drive to succeed,
    commitment, willingness to go the extra mile
    passion
  • Self-regulation, including time management,
    ability to work without supervision, being a
    self-starter seeing things through to a
    conclusion
  • Resilience, i.e. ability to work under pressure
    to cope with stress - emotionally mature,
    emotionally intelligent, spiritually mature

21
DISCUSSION OF THE RESULTS OF THE SURVEY
Enhancing the Employability of NMMU Graduates
  • Address unrealistic expectations of students
    regarding the world of work
  • More opportunities for experiential learning
    before graduation
  • Academic staff should work more closely with
    relevant employers to enhance the relevance of
    curricula facilitate experiential
    learning/graduate placement
  • Relevant or market-related programmes
  • Improve communication skills of all students
  • Emphasise work ethics
  • Develop soft skills
  • Embed knowledge on basic business practice into
    all curricula

22
THE WAY FORWARD Some considerations for closing
the loop
  • Research-informed dialogue with academics other
    stakeholders to enhance curriculum responsiveness
    role of IR
  • Systematic impact studies go beyond merely
    counting the number of employed graduates in SA
    deeper analyses of graduate employability
  • Possibility of follow-up studies to inform
    analyses of HE impact
  • At departmental or programme level (e.g. as part
    of programme review/ professional accreditation
    processes)
  • At institutional level constraints financial
    HR capacity availability of accurate alumni
    data comparability of research findings
  • Need to implement nationally commissioned
    graduate employability studies at sectoral level
    funded by DoHET/CHE e.g. Australia, UK
  • Conduct comparative analyses of SA research
    findings with similar international studies

23
THANK YOU!
Heather.Nel_at_nmmu.ac.za Annemarie.Barnard_at_nmmu.ac.z
a
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com