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Showing posts with label employability of students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label employability of students. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

What next for higher education? Here's an alternate learning model for the future [World Economic Forum, November 2022]

Title:
What next for higher education? Here's an alternate learning model for the future
 
Author:
Sanjay E. Sarma
Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) 

Published:
World Economic Forum, 17 November 2022

From the article:
* The disconnect between higher education and employability is growing, along with the soaring costs of tuition fees and student debt. 
 
* Employers are relying less on college education and many are exploring alternate educational pathways to employment. 
 
* The new educational institutional (NEI) model takes an alternate approach that combines academic and practical experience.
 

Saturday, October 1, 2022

The transition from higher education to first employment in Spain [Scholarly Article - European Journal of Education, September 2022]

Title:
The transition from higher education to first employment in Spain
 
Authors:
Encarnación Cordón-Lagares, Félix García-Ordaz & Juan José García-del-Hoyo
 
Published:
European Journal of Education, 16 September 2022
 
Abstract:
This article explores the determinants of the transition from higher education to work, analysing the time it takes college graduates to obtain their first job in Spain. To estimate the exit rate to employment of university graduates, we use parametric and nonparametric analysis of duration models. We have incorporated unobserved heterogeneity using frailty models to account for misspecification or omitted covariates. The results show that after graduation, men are more likely to obtain employment than women. Our results also show that graduates of private universities gain their first jobs sooner than graduates of public universities. Furthermore, we found that those graduates who have previous work experience and those who start looking for a job before the end of their degree programme are likely to obtain a job sooner. In addition, Arts and Humanities graduates have the greatest difficulty in finding work. Finally, the results suggest that graduates who have international experience and those with expert knowledge of communication are more likely to obtain employment. 
 

Monday, March 30, 2020

Inside Higher Ed Special Report - Careers in a Changing Era: How Higher Ed Can Fight the Skills Gap and Prepare Students for a Dynamic World of Work

Title of report:
Careers in a Changing Era: How Higher Ed Can Fight the Skills Gap and Prepare Students for a Dynamic World of Work

Published:
Inside Higher Ed, 30 March 2020

Focus of report:
"This special report describes what institutions of all kinds are doing to improve the employability of their students. The strategies covered in this report should inform the decisions other colleges make to get ahead of the narrative that they’re not doing enough to prepare students for today’s economy."

For more information & to download a free preview of the report and/or to purchase this report:
https://www.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2020/03/30/careers-changing-era-how-higher-ed-can-fight-skills-gap-and-prepare-students