This article aims to understand predictors of objective (i.e. job offers, employment status and employment quality) and subjective (i.e. perceived) graduate employability during university-to-work transitions. Using survey data from two cohorts of graduates in the UK (N = 293), it contrasts three competing theoretical approaches to employability: position (based on social background), possession (of human capital) and process (of career self-management (CSM)). Findings support the process view of graduate employability, developed through engaging in CSM, in particular environment exploration, networking and guidance seeking. There is also some support for a possession view where educational credentials predict employment quality and perceiv...
There are suggestions that employers are dissatisfied with the levels of skills graduates have prior...
A discourse of employability saturates the Higher Education sector in the UK. Government and employe...
Recent shifts in education and labour market policy have resulted in universities being placed under...
This article aims to understand predictors of objective (i.e. job offers, employment status and empl...
This research paper is a qualitative study analysing the perception that graduates have regarding th...
This study focuses on the undergraduate self-perception of employability. We aimed to explore the im...
Students’ perceptions of graduate employability are not well known. This research contributes a new ...
In the light of emerging challenges to traditional employment patterns, not least, global competitio...
The most common definitions of graduate employability emphasise the possession of understandings, sk...
This paper addresses the limited empirical analysis of higher education students’ perceptions of con...
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of some of the dominant empirical and conceptual...
Given that higher education requires high levels of individual and public investment, it is expected...
In todays so-called knowledge economy, skills policies in the UK and the 'new' career discourse assu...
Underemployment, continued growth in the supply of graduates and seemingly perpetual instability are...
There are suggestions that employers are dissatisfied with the levels of skills graduates have prior...
There are suggestions that employers are dissatisfied with the levels of skills graduates have prior...
A discourse of employability saturates the Higher Education sector in the UK. Government and employe...
Recent shifts in education and labour market policy have resulted in universities being placed under...
This article aims to understand predictors of objective (i.e. job offers, employment status and empl...
This research paper is a qualitative study analysing the perception that graduates have regarding th...
This study focuses on the undergraduate self-perception of employability. We aimed to explore the im...
Students’ perceptions of graduate employability are not well known. This research contributes a new ...
In the light of emerging challenges to traditional employment patterns, not least, global competitio...
The most common definitions of graduate employability emphasise the possession of understandings, sk...
This paper addresses the limited empirical analysis of higher education students’ perceptions of con...
The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of some of the dominant empirical and conceptual...
Given that higher education requires high levels of individual and public investment, it is expected...
In todays so-called knowledge economy, skills policies in the UK and the 'new' career discourse assu...
Underemployment, continued growth in the supply of graduates and seemingly perpetual instability are...
There are suggestions that employers are dissatisfied with the levels of skills graduates have prior...
There are suggestions that employers are dissatisfied with the levels of skills graduates have prior...
A discourse of employability saturates the Higher Education sector in the UK. Government and employe...
Recent shifts in education and labour market policy have resulted in universities being placed under...