Employability and Entrepreneurship

In this section you will find sources of information concerning the development of students' skills — both subject specific and generic — that will be relevant to them in seeking a job and doing that job effectively.

Transferable Skills

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Projects

Research on Employability

Employability Survey 2006/07

This project was conducted by the Applied Statistics and Quantitative Modelling Consultancy Unit (ASQM) at the University of the West of England and supported by the Economics Network and the Royal Economic Society. It sought to inform the UK economics academic community about employers' requirements of economics graduates, to establish whether they think these graduates generally possess the required skills and knowledge, and to reveal any clear shortfalls. It also sought to establish whether the Economics subject Benchmark Statement is regarded as appropriate by employers. You can read a summary of the results is available (PDF) or the full report (PDF).

Economics Student Employability Profile 2005

The Student Employability Profile (Word document) uses interviews with Economics graduates to examine the distinctive strengths of a degree the subject.

Alumni Survey (Economics Graduates) and Employers Interviews 2004

The Economics Network conducted interviews with employers and alumni to investigate the knowledge and skills acquired in an Economics degree and their relevance to jobs and careers. This work is part of an ongoing research project into learning, teaching and employability in Economics HE.

National aggregate results can be downloaded in PDF format. They can help provide better understanding of the links between curriculum, learning experiences and career outcomes.

Student Perspectives

Three questions in our 2006 student survey addressed questions of employability: we asked students what they saw as the best aspects of their degree, what useful skills they had developed, and how they had been changed by the course.

The Higher Education Academy has an index of tools to improve student employability and other resources and links.

Employability resources are available from the Scottish Higher Education Employability Network's (SHEEN) site.

There is a Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL) in Embedding, Enhancing and Integrating Employability at Sheffield Hallam University.

Another Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning is Write Now, which "aims to enrich students' learning experiences through the development of innovative, evidence-based provision focused on writing for assessment."

The Enhancement Themes for Scottish HE include Employability and Graduates for the 21st Century.