This article outlines a concurrent complementarity, mixed methods research design to explore the careers of university professional staff through the application of a contemporary career profile framework. Two hundred and twenty-six participants from Australia and the UK completed a multi-method questionnaire. Integration occurred at three points: the conceptualisation stage using a multi-method instrument; the experiential stage where the quantitative data results acted as a priori themes for the theoretical thematic analysis; and the inferential stage where both convergent and divergent triangulation of the results took place to provide a broader and deeper understanding of the phenomenon under study. This methodological design aims to de...
This study was aimed at identifying the critical interactions within work environments that support ...
Across Europe, ongoing changes in higher education, such as the stagnating (even decreasing) percent...
The paper draws on evidence from a survey of Australian and UK students (N=433) on students’ career ...
This dissertation aims to understand the careers of professional staff working in universities: how ...
This article confirms the reliability of a protean and boundaryless career attitudes scale, tested i...
Professional staff total approximately 23% of staff in universities in the UK, which in 2014/15 was ...
Purpose: Human capital is a key component of the success of organisations, and career development of...
This paper reports on research which was conducted to explore how university students and those who ...
Universities today play two important roles in the systematic development of future professionals: T...
Although professional staff comprise more than half the Australian higher education workforce, typic...
This paper reports on research which was conducted to explore how university students and those who ...
This paper uses a framework analysis to explore the opinions a cohort of Australian academic staff h...
As university graduates face increasingly changing and challenging labour markets and work environme...
This paper presents findings from the initial stage of a larger study on the career management of ol...
Universities are both a source of employable graduates and careers. This paper examines universities...
This study was aimed at identifying the critical interactions within work environments that support ...
Across Europe, ongoing changes in higher education, such as the stagnating (even decreasing) percent...
The paper draws on evidence from a survey of Australian and UK students (N=433) on students’ career ...
This dissertation aims to understand the careers of professional staff working in universities: how ...
This article confirms the reliability of a protean and boundaryless career attitudes scale, tested i...
Professional staff total approximately 23% of staff in universities in the UK, which in 2014/15 was ...
Purpose: Human capital is a key component of the success of organisations, and career development of...
This paper reports on research which was conducted to explore how university students and those who ...
Universities today play two important roles in the systematic development of future professionals: T...
Although professional staff comprise more than half the Australian higher education workforce, typic...
This paper reports on research which was conducted to explore how university students and those who ...
This paper uses a framework analysis to explore the opinions a cohort of Australian academic staff h...
As university graduates face increasingly changing and challenging labour markets and work environme...
This paper presents findings from the initial stage of a larger study on the career management of ol...
Universities are both a source of employable graduates and careers. This paper examines universities...
This study was aimed at identifying the critical interactions within work environments that support ...
Across Europe, ongoing changes in higher education, such as the stagnating (even decreasing) percent...
The paper draws on evidence from a survey of Australian and UK students (N=433) on students’ career ...