Employability: Short Term and Long Term

A. Naik, Ratnakar Ambig
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Abstract

In a competitive, culturally diverse and increasingly internationalized workplace students cannot any longer assume that possession of a tertiary degree will naturally lead to employment. There has been a shift in the mindset of employers, who now seek to employ graduates with “employability” skills and attributes in addition to traditional expertise within their discipline. At first glance this appears to have placed an additional burden on universities in preparing students to be active citizens and engaged leaders, both within their chosen field. This paper discusses the project we embarked upon to compare the skills and attributes that employers consider most desirable with those traditionally required for academic success. We sought to determine to what degree these two skill sets can co-exist in units of study and found that have the same underlying principles as, traditional academic skills. By considering these principles we believe it is possible to design learning experiences that support the development of both sets of skills and to embed such learning experiences in the content and teaching of discipline-specific courses, thus developing employability skills while maintaining academic rigor. This will help students meet the twin goals of obtaining a tertiary degree and maximizing their employability potential
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就业能力:短期和长期
在竞争激烈、文化多样化和日益国际化的工作环境中,学生们不能再认为拥有高等教育学位就能自然而然地找到工作。雇主们的心态已经发生了转变,他们现在希望雇佣的毕业生除了在本专业领域拥有传统专业知识外,还具备“就业能力”技能和特点。乍一看,这似乎给大学增加了额外的负担,让学生在他们选择的领域内成为积极的公民和积极的领导者。本文讨论了我们开始的一个项目,将雇主认为最可取的技能和属性与传统上学术成功所要求的技能和属性进行比较。我们试图确定这两种技能在多大程度上可以在学习单元中共存,并发现它们具有与传统学术技能相同的基本原则。通过考虑这些原则,我们相信有可能设计出支持这两套技能发展的学习经验,并将这些学习经验嵌入到学科特定课程的内容和教学中,从而在保持学术严谨性的同时发展就业技能。这将帮助学生达到获得高等教育学位和最大限度地提高就业潜力的双重目标
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