employer engagement for employability

28
Employer Engagement for Employability

Upload: parson

Post on 25-Feb-2016

16 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Employer Engagement for Employability. Programme. 10.00 Arrival with coffee 10.15 Welcomes, introductions, overview, scope 10.30 – 11.15Policy Overview 11.15 – 11.30 Coffee and comment 11.30 – 1.00 Keynote presentation and workshop 1.00-1.30 Lunch 1.30-2.15 Case Studies - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Employer Engagement for Employability

Employer Engagement for Employability

Page 2: Employer Engagement for Employability

Programme

10.00 Arrival with coffee

10.15 Welcomes, introductions, overview, scope

10.30 – 11.15 Policy Overview

11.15 – 11.30 Coffee and comment

11.30 – 1.00 Keynote presentation and workshop

1.00-1.30 Lunch

1.30-2.15 Case Studies

2.15 – 2.45 Coffee and comment

2.45 – 4.00 Workshops

Page 3: Employer Engagement for Employability

Welcome!

Brief introductions.

Page 4: Employer Engagement for Employability

ASHPIT – What and Why

ASHPIT is a think tank which will enhance the ability of researcher developers to deliver innovative discipline-appropriate support to researchers in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (ASH).

ASHPIT makes best use of limited resources and funding and is a way to:

• embed and sustain best practice; • bring together good practice that has evolved during the period of Roberts

funding and to disseminate it to the widest possible audience; • support capacity-building: sharing the resources and commitment means that

institutions will be able to retain more than just the core functions that the current funding climate might otherwise dictate;

• complement the existing Vitae regional hub model• support Vitae in responding to the recommendations of the Hodge Review

Page 5: Employer Engagement for Employability

Our principle areas of investigation will be:

Becoming a focus for ideas generation in targeted areas (public engagement, entrepreneurship, and employer engagement in year 1, impact and evaluation, researcher-led initiatives and TBC in year 2);

Developing an implementation framework by ensuring training resources are evidence-based and reflect changes in policy (such as the move from the JSS to the RDF, the Concordat, and other policy initiatives as they arise);

Coordinating the design and delivery of five innovative training courses to feed into the VITAE Database of Resources and the national VITAE training programme. This will include a review of existing resources/practice, a collaborative gap analysis, and a ‘policy-first’ approach to shaping new content. In pipeline: Public Engagement masterclass November 2011 and Youtube ‘100 stories’ initiative.

ASHPIT’s focus

Page 6: Employer Engagement for Employability

Policy is important because….• it shows us how we fit into the bigger picture (in terms of national

policy and institutional policy);• it informs evidence-based practice (helps us keep up with trends and

ensures on-going relevance to researchers and employers);• it gives us the information we need to write successful funding bids;

We need to read policy for:• Trends (alumni, entrepreneurship, widening participation,

employer-led curricula);• Themes (discipline-sensitivity; STEM bias);• Funding opportunities and/or opportunities for collaborative

practice (ASHPIT; AHRC/ESRC, Vitae, LEPs?)

Why Policy Matters

Page 7: Employer Engagement for Employability

Learning Outcomes for this sessionBy the end of this session you will have:

• been introduced to key policy documents on employer engagement and employability as it relates to researchers

What is said about it? What are the implications for us?• been introduced to some examples of good practice in employer

engagement and employability; What is it? How is it being done?

• considered some of the challenges in engaging employers with ASH researchers and ASH researchers with employers; How can we do it well?

• worked collaboratively to think about innovative ways of addressing the following three skills gaps identified by (some) employers as missing in (some) researchers: leadership skills, work experience and an ability to explain the value of their postgraduate degree

How can we develop good, sustainable practice?

Page 8: Employer Engagement for Employability

What we are going to look at

• 3 types of documents that can be helpful (and how they fit together);

• Tracing themes;

• What can we learn from what’s already been written;

• What does this mean for ASSH researchers/researcher developers?;

• Case Studies;

Page 9: Employer Engagement for Employability

Government Policy & ActivityParticularly BIS

Affected by change in govt; broader economic picture

Research CouncilsAHRC & ESRC in particular, plus policy

documents from RCUK

UniversitiesIncluding UUK Vitae

Researcher Developers

What policy and how does it fit together?

Researchers!

Advisory & Representative Groups CIHE, EEUK, SSCs, HEA, UKCGE

Smith Review - One Step Beyond: Making the most of the postgraduate education sector

(2010)

Recruiting researchers:survey of employer practice (2009)

Doctoral graduate destinations and impact three years on (2010)

Hodge Review of Researcher Skills Development (2010)

HEA Exchange Magazine, Focus on the Postgraduate Student Experience (2009)

The Value of Graduates andPostgraduates (Nov. 2009)

Talent Fishing, What businesses want from postgraduates (2010)

RCUK Delivery Plan (2012-15) and respective training frameworks from AHRC and ESRC

Hidden Connections: Knowledge exchange between the arts and humanities and the private, public and third sectors (2011)

Leitch Review of Future Skills Needs in the UK (2006)

Impact

SurveysRelated directly to skills development

The Concordat and the RDF/ RDS

Page 10: Employer Engagement for Employability

Dearing Report 1997 Joint Skills Statement 2001

Roberts’ Review and Government

Response 2002Warry Report 2006

Leitch Review 2006Smith Review 2009Vitae – Researcher

Development Framework 2010

Skills for Sustainable Growth

November 2010

Hodge Review January 2011

Students at the Heart of the System

June 2011

BIS – Research & Innovation Strategy

(forthcoming)

Employer engagement in Policy

Page 11: Employer Engagement for Employability

Major Themes in Employer Engagement for Employability: From Dearing to Hodge and beyond

• easy and coordinated access for SMEs to find out about services;• need for knowledge exchange between HEIs and business;• demand-led rather than centrally planned;• better engagement between employers and universities;• making postgraduate provision more responsive to the needs of employers and to

prepare postgraduates for a range of careers;• systematic and frequent interactions;• the focus on employment needs is the driver for future developments of

transferable skills training.

Page 12: Employer Engagement for Employability

University of Sheffield

Survey of Employer Attitudes to Postgraduate Researchers

2006

Vitae Employers’ Views of Researchers’ Skills

2007

VitaeRecruiting Researchers:

Survey of Employer Practice 2009

CIHEThe Value of Graduates and

Postgraduates2009

CIHETalent Fishing – What businesses want from

postgraduates2010

Employer Surveys

Page 13: Employer Engagement for Employability

More recent recommendations from employer surveys

Engaging them how? • Not transactional but collaborative and relational.

Valuing the Views of Employers (Richard Brown [CIHE])

Engaging them why?• Market-driven HE environment where employer- needs

drive curriculum design and where employability is as important as technical skill;

• Need for up-to-date information on skills needs;• More business experience opportunities for researchers;• Inform employers about misconceptions about skills of PG

cohort and policy developments in PG training;• Mechanism for feedback.

The Value of Graduates and Postgraduates (Connor & Brown)

Page 14: Employer Engagement for Employability

Why is it difficult to get businesses to engage with ASH (or at least AH)?

• It is often not relevant to their business and is not a factor in their competitiveness;

• There is no information on the benefits of interactions;• There is no information on how to interact.

Hidden Connections

• Increasingly under-resourced and lack time for anything beyond the essential.

AGC CE project preliminary findings

Page 15: Employer Engagement for Employability

• employability - “an individual's ability to gain initial employment, maintain employment, move between roles within the same organisation, obtain new employment if required and (ideally) secure suitable and sufficiently fulfilling work, in other words- their employability, more important than the simple state of being employed.” (Hillage and Pollard 1998 in What is Employability? Simon McGrath, UNESCO Centre for Comparative Education Research, School of Education, University of Nottingham, 2009).

• An understanding of the skills needs of employers;

• Hosts for placements;

• Possible start of a longer-term relationship that might lead to a CDA or equivalent (via the BDE?);

• Impact.

What do we want to get out of employer engagement ?

Page 16: Employer Engagement for Employability

• All employers want different things; Can we translate the global needs of employers into the individualised researcher training provision required by the research councils?

• Expectation that HEI will do the leg-work on getting researchers ready for the workplace. Should businesses be more willing to take on some of this training/ acclimatisation?;

• The skills most often-cited as lacking are not ‘teachable’: leadership, work experience, confidence;

• Retaining a value to HE that goes beyond its use value to business.

What are the challenges?

Page 17: Employer Engagement for Employability

What does employability mean for ASH researchers?

The picture is different for ASH in terms of destination, recruitment:

• A higher proportion of ASH researchers stay in HE. But if they don’t, their destinations are very diverse with 10.3% going into ‘other’;

• They are not necessarily a desirable commodity and this makes employer engagement challenging.

Page 18: Employer Engagement for Employability

What are the skills needs of ‘other’?

When we talk about employer-needs, are we asking enough about the changing skills needs of academia? Can seem ‘skills-free’.

Page 19: Employer Engagement for Employability
Page 20: Employer Engagement for Employability
Page 21: Employer Engagement for Employability

Challenges

To complete once presentation finished.

Might not need a new approach to training. Might need a new approach to articulating skills via reflective practice – getting more out of less.

On-going skills gaps: work experience, leadership, articulation of skills (plus ability to work in a team, confidence, interpersonal skills). Why do they continue to be ‘hard-to-reach’?

Page 22: Employer Engagement for Employability

Sarah Kerr & Rebekah Smith McGloin – University of NottinghamResearcherCurator – employer engagement with a creative industry partner – challenges and……challenges!

Elizabeth Wilkinson – University of ManchesterThe challenges of encouraging ASH engagement, both from postgrads and from ASH employers and alumni.

Richard Carruthers – University of SouthamptonSouthampton City Council Case Study for Humanities students.

Examples of existing employer engagement activity

Page 24: Employer Engagement for Employability
Page 25: Employer Engagement for Employability

ResearcherCuratorGroup Researcher Placements in the Creative Industry:

Challenges and….challenges!

What was the original project?

Why did we scale it down?

Difficulties of working with the CIs – time and communications

What skills did the students learn?

How will they maximise the outcomes (reflective practice)

Page 26: Employer Engagement for Employability

Peer Support Other Grad

School provisionSupervisor Support

Careers Service

Emotions

ActionReflection

ActionReflection

ActionReflection

1. FrameGoal-setting

Introduction to reflective practice

Careers context

2. ReviewGoals

3. ReframeRe-set goals

re-evaluate context

4. ImplementWriting skills section of CV

Use newly-developed skills in research

Apply for other placements/ jobs

= Evaluation Point

Internal experienceIntention to

learn Work place environment

The Arts Graduate CentreReflective Practice Model for Researcher Placements

Page 27: Employer Engagement for Employability

Workshop

• 45 minutes: Using some of the DoP headings in groups of 4 mind map an idea for a researcher development activity based around leadership/ articulating skills/ work experience. This might build on one of the case studies or might be an original idea.

• 15 minutes: Report back to room. Peer feedback.

Are you interested in working with us to progress one of these ideas and transform it into an entry on the Vitae Database of Resources?

Page 28: Employer Engagement for Employability

1. Title2. Outline (the lift sell!)3. What (RDF-benchmarked) skills will this practice develop?4. Who is the audience?5. What are the aims & expected outcomes (short-term, medium-term, long-term)?6. Are there prerequisites for participation?7. How many can participate?8. How will you monitor effectiveness?9. What are the challenges (risk management)?10. What are the next steps?

Headings from the Database of Practice