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MURG 28 March, 2012 Researcher employability and impact Dr Janet Metcalfe, Vitae

MURG 28 March, 2012 Researcher employability and impact Dr Janet Metcalfe, Vitae janet.metcalfe@vitae.ac.uk. What do UK researchers do?. Vitae vision and aims Career intentions Destinations Impact Researcher journeys Mobility Researchers’ knowledge, attributes and expertise.

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MURG 28 March, 2012 Researcher employability and impact Dr Janet Metcalfe, Vitae

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  1. MURG 28 March, 2012 Researcher employability and impact Dr Janet Metcalfe, Vitae janet.metcalfe@vitae.ac.uk

  2. What do UK researchers do? • Vitae vision and aims • Career intentions • Destinations • Impact • Researcher journeys • Mobility • Researchers’ knowledge, attributes and expertise

  3. Vitae vision and aims “For the UK to be world-class in supporting the personal, professional and career development of researchers” Build human capital by influencing the development and implementation of effective policy relating to researcher development Enhance higher education provision to train and develop researchers Empower researchers to make an impact in their careers Evidence the impact of professional andcareer development support for researchers

  4. Understanding the employability and impact of researchers • What do researchers do? • What do researchers want to do? • First destinations by subject • Career profiles and video narratives • Destinations and impact three years on • Career paths of doctoral graduates • Understanding employers’ needs • targeting the postgraduate and researcher market • researchers’ skills and competencies • Employers’ views of researchers’ skills

  5. Career motivationsWhat do researchers want to do? • Only 33% have definite ideas about their careers (even in last year of doctorate); 20% little idea • Career intentions dominated by interest in field and desire to apply knowledge and skills • Job availability, salary or prospects secondary factors • Definite idea • Considering several options • Only vague idea • No idea

  6. Anticipated career

  7. ImpactWhat do researchers do? Doctoral graduate destinations and impact three years on2010

  8. WDRD? Destinations and impact three years on • Employability • Employment circumstances (2% unemployed) • Employment sector and occupation • Status (contract/mode of work) • Median annual salary (£34k D; £25k B) • Value of the doctorate (82% requirement or important) • Satisfaction with career to date (93%) • Impact of the doctorate • Use of knowledge, skills and experience (research skills 82%; generic skills (91%) • Make a difference in the workplace / innovation (94%) • Access to, and progress, towards long term career aspirations (87%) • Enhance social and intellectual capabilities and quality of life (89%)

  9. Unique doctoral occupations (86%) Other common doctoral occupations include: Health professionals (18%); Functional and production managers and senior officials (25%); Engineering professionals (14%); ICT professionals (10%); Business, finance and statistical professional roles (15%)

  10. Importance of doctorate, skills and competencies for current employment

  11. Use of knowledge, skills andexperience

  12. Benefits and wider impact of doctoral experience in work and lives

  13. MobilityWhat do researchers do? Career pathways of doctoral graduates 2011 • Identified range of career paths • Time in and out of the labour market • Movements between clusters • Examples of roles and careers • Progression and promotion

  14. Overall cluster movement

  15. HE research cluster • 19% decrease over time from largest cluster (23%) to third largest (18%) • Most dynamic cluster: • 40% leave, mainly to teaching & lecturing in HE • 26% move in, mainly from other occupations or wider research • 57% stayed in cluster throughout (62% in same job)

  16. Key career pathways

  17. Online labour market information Researchers: Careers section: www.vitae.ac.uk/lmi

  18. Vitae ResearcherDevelopment Framework • Framework of the knowledge, behaviour and attributes of successful researchers • Enables self-assessment of strengths and areas for further development • Common language for researchers capabilities

  19. Employabilitylens on the RDF

  20. Employers’ expectation of researchers’ performance (high and very high) Employer categories Group 1: actively target doctorates Group 2: strong interest Group 3: some interest, occasionally recruit Group 4: no interest Recruiting researchers, 2009, 104 employers

  21. Useful links Vitae: www.vitae.ac.uk What do researchers do? www.vitae.ac.uk/wdrd Labour market information www.vitae.ac.uk/lmi Impact and evaluation www.vitae.ac.uk/impact Careers advice for researchers www.vitae.ac.uk/careers Vitae employers www.vitae.ac.uk/employers Researcher Development Framework www.vitae.ac.uk/rdf janet.metcalfe@vitae.ac.uk

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