1 / 91

A STRATEGIC APPROACH TO DEVELOPING EMPLOYABILITY IN A MODERN UNIVERSITY

A STRATEGIC APPROACH TO DEVELOPING EMPLOYABILITY IN A MODERN UNIVERSITY. David Bagley Head of Employability and Enterprise. Where is UCLan ?. The region includes Liverpool & Manchester Also Preston, Lancashire, Cumbria A mix of cities and rural areas

fionan
Download Presentation

A STRATEGIC APPROACH TO DEVELOPING EMPLOYABILITY IN A MODERN UNIVERSITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A STRATEGIC APPROACH TO DEVELOPING EMPLOYABILITY IN A MODERN UNIVERSITY David Bagley Head of Employability and Enterprise

  2. Where is UCLan?

  3. The region includes Liverpool & Manchester Also Preston, Lancashire, Cumbria A mix of cities and rural areas Fewer business start ups than most of UK. Low skills base. Need to retain Graduates in the region. UCLan is in the North West of England

  4. UCLan History • 1828 INSTITUTE FOR THE DIFFUSION OF KNOWLEDGE • 1882 HARRIS INSTITUTE • 1956 HARRIS COLLEGE • 1973 PRESTON POLYTECHNIC • 1984 LANCASHIRE POLYTECHNIC • 1992 UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL LANCASHIRE

  5. The University Today • 32,000 students – over 100 nationalities • Close partnerships with local colleges • Close partnerships with overseas universities • Academic excellence • Outstanding student experience • In top 5 nationally for business startups and sustainable development

  6. Is the employability of our graduates important?

  7. It is important: for students, for employers, for the economy for universities competing for students.

  8. “Typically, we might recruit up to 1,500 graduates onto . . . . our 70 graduate programmes around the world . . . . For those jobs, globally, we receive almost 100,000 applications.” (Stephen Green, HSBC Holdings 2009) Why we do it

  9. In UK the Association of Graduate Recruiters reported that on average last year there were 69 applications for every graduate job in the UK. Why we do it

  10. A University for Employability A key theme of our Medium Term Strategy: We seek to develop graduates who are noted for their employability, leadership and dependability.

  11. What needs to be considered in the strategy for employability?

  12. What needs to be considered in the strategy? • Meanings: Employability, Enterprise, Entrepreneurship. • What is taught. • How it is taught. • Extra curricular learning. • Staff development • Employability support service • Resources

  13. Meanings What do you mean by ‘Employability’, ‘Enterprise’, ‘Entrepreneurship’? Does it matter?

  14. UCLan definition of graduate employability ‘Employability is having a set of skills, knowledge, understanding and personal attributes that make a person more likely to choose and secure occupations in which they can be satisfied and successful.’ (Dacre Pool & Sewell, 2007)

  15. Enterprise is having a willingness to undertake new or risky projects, participating actively with energy and initiative. ‘Being Enterprising is the ability of individuals and businesses to respond positively to change, to take risks, be competitive, innovative, creative and proactive, and to generate and implement new ideas and new ways of doing things.’ (NW Regional Enterprise Strategy (draft) 2008) Enterprise:

  16. Enterprising individuals demonstrate behaviours, attitudes and skills such as independence, opportunity seeking, strategic thinking and a commitment to making things happen. They can apply these skills in more or less any walk of life. There are enterprising individuals in, for example, the clergy, education, public administration and the voluntary sector. They may have little knowledge of, or interest in, business. Entrepreneurs apply such skills and behaviours to the process of setting up and running (and perhaps growing) a new for profit or social business organisation. (Botham & Mason 2007) Enterprising people & Entrepreneurs

  17. Three Es Employability Enterprise Entrepreneurship

  18. Background to the CareerEDGE model of graduate employability • The need for a coherent, practical model of graduate employability. • Something that could be understood by students, academic staff, careers practitioners, employers and parents.

  19. The CareerEDGE Model of Graduate Employability Career Development Learning Experience (Work & Life) Degree Subject Knowledge, Understanding and Skills Generic Skills Emotional Intelligence

  20. The Employability Development Profile (EDP)

  21. What should be taught?

  22. Central ‘safety net’ generic provision of accredited bolt-on modules. (eg Planning Your Career, Starting a Business, placements, mentoring). Tailored options for specific course (eg Planning your Career in Film & Media). Embedded in core modules (eg in Linguistics). Extra-curricular enrichment workshops. An additional award for undergraduates. • Embedded + Bolt-on approach based on Career EDGE:

  23. How is it taught? Active Learning

  24. And not just vocational courses

  25. History runs live projects too . . .

  26. 1900 accredited modules addressing aspects of Enterprise

  27. 603 accredited Enterprise modules

  28. Not enough room in the curriculum!

  29. Extra Curricular Learning.

  30. Over 200 optional extra-curricular Enterprise workshops run

  31. A UCLanprogramme to encourage enterprise and entrepreneurship Extra-curricular workshops and events Advice on business start ups Business Mentoring New business incubation Work placements to support SMEs Awards for enterprising students www.uclan.ac.uk/northernlights Northern Lights: extra-curricula

  32. We work with the SU on extra curricular options

  33. Training for Students’ Union officers and 500+ course representatives.

  34. Plus the biggest University based volunteering programme in the country

  35. Extra-curricular learning can be captured in the futures award

  36. The futures award is a new accredited programme to be taken by all full time undergraduate students. It allows students to develop employability and enterprise skills no matter what their programme of study. The futures award

  37. Following a diagnostic process students choose from a wide range of workshops, projects and activities to develop the qualities they need. The futures award

  38. The Futures award

  39. The Futures award • Indicative options: • Effective Self Management • Effective Task Management • Effective People Management • I’m The One You’re Looking For • Stepping Into Your Graduate Career • Assessment Centre Practice • Psychometric Testing • Creative Problem Solving • Creating A Social Enterprise • New Business Enterprise • Introduction to Volunteering • Introduction to Leadership • Business Planning • Presentation Skills • Global Employability Skills • Xing Toolkit • Reflective Writing • Getting a Job in the North West • Numeracy for Nurses • Supporting Work Experience • Accredited Mentoring • Live Student Project • Creativity in the Workplace • Learning Through Work

  40. Employability support service

More Related