ABSTRACT
Debate surrounding the employability of graduates has been around for many decades, and interest in this area has grown particularly since the start of this century. Tackling this relevant area of scholarship, this book uses an innovative approach to analyse the relationship between the university and the labour market from different perspectives, taking into account both sociological and economic theories. Key areas explored include work transition, graduate employability, and the effects of public interventions/initiatives which are aimed at matching the competences of graduates to labour market needs.
The chapters summarise several years of author original research, including study on the employability of graduates in Poland more specifically, and the effects of their public interventions to increase graduate employment and facilitate entry into the workforce (e.g. Commissioned Fields of Study, Competences Development Programme). More generally, university – labour market relations are analysed from three perspectives: micro (understood as individual characteristics shaping educational and occupational choices and decisions), and meso and macro (e.g. features of the education system and such as the strength of the signal sent by HE diplomas; the macroeconomic situation and the condition of the labour market and the state of debate on general and employability competences and its implications). The conclusions made are pertinent given ongoing debates around graduate mismatch in the labour market, as well as the questioning of tuition fees and the role of the university in society more broadly.
The interdisciplinary nature of this book makes it of great interest to academics, researchers and postgraduate students in the areas of sociology, economy, public policy, and also to practitioners designing educational interventions themselves.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|45 pages
The transition from graduation to work – theoretical perspectives
chapter 1|14 pages
Human capital theory
chapter 2|9 pages
Education as a positional good
chapter 3|15 pages
Social closure models
chapter |5 pages
Summary
part II|54 pages
Structural-institutional settings, individual characteristics and university-work transition
chapter 4|14 pages
Employability skills agenda, skills race and IVth Industrial Revolution
chapter 5|17 pages
Individual characteristics and university to work transition
chapter 6|15 pages
Structural-institutional settings and university to work transition
chapter |4 pages
Annexe II
chapter |2 pages
Summary
part III|40 pages
University-work transition and public interventions – the case of Competence Development Program in Poland