Gen Z students' work-integrated learning experiences and work values

IF 1.9 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Higher Education Skills and Work-based Learning Pub Date : 2023-04-07 DOI:10.1108/heswbl-02-2023-0050
David W. Drewery, My Truong, A. Fannon
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Abstract

PurposeThis study aims to explore the relationship between the number of co-operative (co-op) education work terms that students completed and the importance they attach to employer and job attributes (i.e. work values).Design/methodology/approachData were collected from a large cross-sectional survey of co-op students (N = 2,097) from one Canadian university.FindingsOf the 19 work values measured, only six were related to work experience. Whereas work experience was related to several of the least important work values, such as geographic location, it was unrelated to many of the most important work values, such as work–life balance. Further, evidence suggests that changes in work values occur when work experience is first introduced in the curriculum (e.g. first co-op work term), not at subsequent work experiences.Research limitations/implicationsThe findings extend the understanding of how work-integrated learning (WIL) prepares students to make decisions about their careers in the future of work and provide insights to address the challenge of scaling WIL. However, the study draws on cross-sectional data from one single Canadian university and does not explore potentially confounding factors including time itself or critical events such as the COVID-19 pandemic.Practical implicationsWIL educators may leverage these findings to improve their understanding of how students' work values evolve as they complete WIL experiences. They may also use insights from the study to align students' needs and employers' understandings of those needs.Originality/valueThis study is the first to explore how work values might change throughout a WIL program, particularly among Gen Z students whose work values seem divergent from those of previous generations.
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Z世代学生的工作综合学习经历和工作价值观
目的本研究旨在探讨学生完成的合作(合作)教育工作条款的数量与他们对雇主和工作属性(即工作价值观)的重视程度之间的关系。设计/方法/方法数据来自加拿大一所大学的合作学生(N=2097)的大规模横断面调查。调查结果在测量的19项工作价值中,只有6项与工作经验有关。尽管工作经验与几个最不重要的工作价值观有关,如地理位置,但它与许多最重要的工作值无关,如工作与生活的平衡。此外,有证据表明,工作价值观的变化发生在课程首次引入工作经验时(例如,第一个合作工作学期),而不是在随后的工作经验中。研究局限性/含义研究结果扩展了对工作整合学习(WIL)如何让学生在未来的工作中做出职业决策的理解,并为应对扩展WIL的挑战提供了见解。然而,该研究利用了加拿大一所大学的横断面数据,没有探索潜在的混淆因素,包括时间本身或新冠肺炎大流行等关键事件。实践意义WIL教育者可以利用这些发现来提高他们对学生在完成WIL经历时工作价值观如何演变的理解。他们还可以利用研究的见解来调整学生的需求和雇主对这些需求的理解。独创性/价值观这项研究首次探讨了在整个WIL项目中,工作价值观可能会发生怎样的变化,尤其是在Z世代学生中,他们的工作价值观似乎与前几代人的不同。
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来源期刊
Higher Education Skills and Work-based Learning
Higher Education Skills and Work-based Learning EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
36
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