scholarly journals Professional substitutability and additional education of engineering graduates

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 275-281
Author(s):  
Valentin N. Mikhelkevich ◽  
Lyudmila P. Ovchinnikova ◽  
Svetlana V. Chugunova

The paper deals with the psycho-didactic problems arising in employing engineering graduates for positions that dont meet either the level or the area of training acquired at a technical higher school. Foreign authors refer to this socio-didactic phenomenon as professional substitutability. It is stressed that in a market-based society professional substitutability is, to some extent, predictable and inevitable. For that reason, the adaptation of university graduates to taking up job vacancies is becoming highly relevant both for young specialists and for their potential employers, as well as for the system of additional education. It is shown that professional substitutability may be of two kinds: vertical and horizontal. Vertical substitutability refers to the situations when graduates with a specific degree (specialist, bachelor, master) in a specific field and subject of training are employed according to the area of their higher school, but the job qualification doesnt match the graduates qualification (it may be either higher or lower). Horizontal substitutability refers to the processes when the graduate, due to some extraordinary circumstances, is to take up a vacancy that is fully in line with the university qualification; however (in a more favorable situation) it doesnt match the university training, although that major belongs to the same field of training. In a less favorable case, the graduate takes up a position requiring the qualification that may differ from the field of university training. The paper outlines the content and the components of the adaptation period needed for the young employee, when he/she is to go through psychological and professional subject and industry specific functional adaptation independently to bridge the knowledge gap and acquire professional competencies. Usually, the young specialist is to undergo additional training (in industry, technology, science), take a refresher course or enter a masters degree or a post-graduate program. In the paper there is a summary table demonstrating the kinds and types of additional education for young specialists taking up job vacancies according to different types of horizontal and vertical professional substitutability. This table (which, actually, is a morphological matrix) can be used as a navigator for engineering graduates when taking up a job vacancy. It can be also applied by institutions of additional education to develop educational programs and curricula for refreshment and requalification courses.

2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-134
Author(s):  
Jacob Oyugi

This paper stresses the importance of entrepreneurial university towards improving sustainable job creation and improvement in Uganda. The dilemmas the country is facing ranges from excessive poverty, graduate unemployment; over dependence on overseas items and technology; as well as low economic growth and development. These dilemmas are partly triggered by using improper education system especially at the university level. Many people argue that university education in Uganda is principally for its very own sake – to impart knowledge and a love of getting to know with greater paper qualifications. University training is for academic superiority disconnected from day-to-day realities, a closed environment in which information and intellect is the sanctuary of the self-selecting, privileged few – no grasp of what is vital for ordinary people. Yet the fact of university schooling is about helping humans grow in their lives by supporting them to live better life. This paper hence contends that change of universities in Uganda, from ivory tower to entrepreneurial universities, will prepare the students with the conduct, states of mind and attitudes with which to be self-reliant and contribute to job creation and advancement. The paper starts by highlighting the concept of university as an ivory tower. The objectives and framework for designing entrepreneurial university is presented next. The paper suggests that university programmes at all levels of instruction ought to be made significant to the community so as to supply the youth with the required entrepreneurial aptitude. 


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (01) ◽  
Author(s):  
Besin Gaspar ◽  
Yenny Hartanto

Recently the university students are required by their institutions to have the TOEFL score in the fisrt year or in the last year of their study before graduation. Some other higher institutions require their students to submit TOEIC, not TOEFL, before graduation. Companies, in the recruitment process, require the applicants to submit TOEFL score to show their level of English proficiency. The first question is which one is more appropriate for job applicants in the compay: TOEFL  or TOEIC. Another question for university students before graduation is whether to have TOEFL  in the first year or in the last year before graduation. This article aims at answering the two questions raised. The first part will give an overview of various versions of TOEFL  and  TOEIC  and the second part proposes the appropriate English proficiency test  for the recruitment process for new employees and for the university graduates, that is, TOEIC for the company  and TOEFL  for universities  and  colleges. 


Author(s):  
Esmira Mehdiyev ◽  
Celal Teyyar Uğurlu ◽  
Gonca Usta

This study aims to determine the university students’ level of motivation in terms of different variables. A study group of this research has been designed through one of the non-random sampling methods, Using appropriate sampling, 606 students from Faculty of Education of C.U. have been involved in this study. Motivation scale in English Language Learning developed by Mehdiyev,Usta,Uğurlu (2015) was used as an instrument of data collection. T-test and one - way analysis of variance (ANOVA) were used to resolve problems of this research. As a result of the research the motivation level of university students hasn’t been revealed significantly different regarding to the gender variable. However, considering the t-test results of motivation scale dimensions, confidence, attitude and personal use, significant difference is seen in favour of women in personal use dimension. The level of language learning motivation of female students is higher than men’s regarding to personal use dimension. However, men’s and women’s views don’t differ significantly in attitude and confidence dimensions. University students don’t present significant differences in terms of birth place, parent’s education level, total motivation scores and confident, attitude and personal dimensions. Students’ motivation levels are seen not to be influenced by the places such as village, provision or city where they have spent the most of their lifetime. At the same time the findings revealed that parental status variable in terms of primary, secondary and university graduates has no effects on students’ motivation.


Author(s):  
Can Cui ◽  
Yifan Wang ◽  
Qiang Wang

AbstractHuman capital has been acknowledged as a key driver for innovation, thereby promoting regional economic development in the knowledge era. University graduates from China’s “first-class” universities—the top 42 universities, included in the “double first-class” initiative, are considered highly educated human capital. Their migration patterns will exert profound impacts on regional development in China, however, little is known about the migration of these elite university graduates and its underlying driving forces. Using data from the 2018 Graduate Employment Reports, this study reveals that the uneven distribution of “first-class” universities and regional differentials largely shaped the migration of graduates from the university to work. Graduates were found aggregating in eastern first-tier cities, even though appealing talent-orientated policies aimed at attracting human capital had been launched in recent years by second-tier cities. Employing negative binomial models, this study investigates how the characteristics of the city of university and destinations affect the intensity of flows of graduates between them. The results showed that both jobs and urban amenities in the university city and destination city exert impacts on the inflow volume of graduates; whereas talent attraction policies introduced by many second-tier cities are found not to exert positive effects on attracting “first-class” university graduates presently. The trend of human capital migration worth a follow-up investigation, particularly given ongoing policy dynamics, and would shed light on the regional development disparities in China.


2008 ◽  
Vol 18 (10) ◽  
pp. 432-435 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Clark-Burg

An Australian College of Operating Room Nurses (ACORN) submission (ACORN 2002–2008) recently stated that the specialities that suffered significantly from the transition of hospital-based nursing training to university training were the perioperative specialty, critical care and emergency. The main reason for this was that perioperative nursing was not included in the undergraduate nursing curriculum. Less than a handful of universities in Australia offer the subject as a compulsory unit. The University of Notre Dame Australia (UNDA) is one of these universities. This paper will provide an insight into the perioperative nursing care unit embedded within the Bachelor of Nursing (BN) undergraduate curriculum.


2016 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 132-149 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vicente González-Romá ◽  
Juan Pablo Gamboa ◽  
José M. Peiró

We investigated whether a set of indicators of the employability dimensions proposed by Fugate, Kinicki, and Asforth (i.e., career identity, personal adaptability, and human and social capital) are related to university graduates’ employment status and five indicators of the quality of their jobs (pay, hierarchical level, vertical and horizontal match, and job satisfaction). We analyzed a representative sample of university graduates ( N = 7,881) from the population of graduates who obtained their degree from the University of Valencia in the period 2006–2010. The results showed that indicators of human and social capital were related to employment status, whereas indicators of human and social capital and career identity were related to distinct job quality indicators. These results support the validity of the conceptual model proposed by Fugate et al. to investigate employability in samples of university graduates.


1906 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 476-481
Author(s):  
Leonidas Chalmers Glenn ◽  
C. K. Leith

Author(s):  
Tatiana Yevgen’evna Isaeva ◽  
Olga Nikolaevna Bessarabova ◽  
Irina Vladimirovna Savchenko ◽  
Elmira Sherifovna Shefieva ◽  
Elena Rudolfovna Goryunova

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