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Embedding employability, a subject perspective Paper 140 HEA STEM Conference, Edinburgh 30 April – 1 May 2014. Peter Reddy , Aston University Caprice Lantz, University of York Julie Hulme, Discipline Lead: Psychology, HEA. Why a Guide for Departments on Employability in Psychology?.
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Embedding employability, a subject perspective Paper 140HEA STEM Conference, Edinburgh30 April – 1 May 2014 Peter Reddy, Aston University Caprice Lantz, University of York Julie Hulme, Discipline Lead: Psychology, HEA
Why a Guide for Departments on Employability in Psychology? • Employability - major theme across UK HE • importance is clear in the 2011 report on The future of undergraduate Psychology education in the United Kingdom • key issue for applicants, students, parents and advisors • Semi-vocational position of psychology makes it particularly important for our discipline
Why is employability important for Psychology? • Growth – there are a lot of psychology graduates • BSc is non-vocational, professional selection at 22+, not 18+ • Students may • identify with ‘their’ discipline • overestimate vocational opportunities • fail to respond to wider opportunities • We have a responsibility to our students, and to psychology • Employability is a psychological concept – this is our territory
Growth • Psychology f/t undergraduate numbers increased • 25,847 in 1998/9 • 44,945 in 2008/9 • More broadly • 50,000 university students in 1939, • just over twice that in 1961, • 300,000 in 1980 and • about 2,500,000 now • large increases in women, postgraduate and part-time students. • Two thirds of current universities did not exist 20 years ago and in 1981 nearly half of the 46 degree awarding universities were less than 20 years old.
What do we mean by employability? • The USEM model (Yorke and Knight, 2004) • U Understanding,of disciplinary material and, how the world works • S Skilful practices in context, whether discipline based or more generic • E Efficacy beliefs, including a range of personal attributes and qualities • M Metacognition,including the capacity for reflectionand self-regulation • Yorke(2006) employability - the achievements of the graduate and potential to obtain a ‘graduate job’. • ‘… skills, understandings and personal attributes– that make graduates more likely to gain employment and be successful … benefits themselves, the workforce, the community and the economy’Yorke (2004)
….defining employability • Harvey (2004) - on-going developmentalprocess, about developing critical, empowered learners. • Lowden, Hall, Elliot and Lewin (2011) distinguish • narrow focus on skills and attributes • broader approach (including skills and attributes) based on values, intellectual rigor and engagement
What do our students have to offer? • The QAA (2010) subject benchmark statement for psychology • “…due to the wide range of generic skills, and the rigour with which they are taught, training in psychology is widely accepted as providing an excellent preparation for many careers. In addition to subject skills and knowledge, graduates also develop skills in numeracy, teamwork, critical thinking, computing, independent learning and many others, all of which are highly valued by employers” (p.2). • “psychology is distinctive in the rich and diverse range of attributes it develops – skills that are associated with the humanities (e.g. critical thinking and essay writing) and the sciences (hypothesis-testing and numeracy)” (p.5).
Generic skills: Psychology graduates should be able to: • Communicate • Comprehend and use data. • Becomputer literate. • Retrieve and organise information • Handle primary source material critically • Teamwork • Problem solve and reason scientifically • Make critical judgements and evaluations • Be sensitive to contextual and interpersonal factors • Use effectively personal learning and project management skills, becoming more independent and pragmatic as learners • a mix of people skills andintellectual skills • As Trapp, Banister, Ellis et al (2011) point out, these are not exclusive to psychology but the full set has a remarkable reach and scope
Is teaching for employability a betrayal of the university tradition? • The idea of liberal education is notoriously ambiguous but Newman defended it in the 19thCentury from the kind of utilitarianism satirised by Dickens in Hard Times • Now, what I want is Facts. Teach these boys and girls nothing but Facts. Facts alone are wanted in life. Plant nothing else, and root out everything else. You can only form the mind of reasoning animals upon Facts: nothing else will ever be of any service to them. • Includes the idea that the pursuit of knowledge brings liberation from dogma and illusion, and develops epistemic virtues • Barnett (2009) suggests that we talk now of skills rather than knowledge but that learning and understanding (making knowledge your own) has implications for being
Fitting employability into the university mission 1 • Employability broadly defined is an ally of scholarship and an integral part of educating the mind and cultivating understanding. • University is about • ways that assumptions can be questioned, • problems solved and • boundaries extended • as well as the transmission of established knowledge and skills.
Fitting employability into the university mission 2 • Student interest in careers isreally about their own being and becoming, not just about getting a job • Employability embraces • self-knowledge and awareness, • skills in research & analysis, • construction of adult professional identity • development of sophisticated epistemological awareness • aims at the development of reflective, critically aware and ethically informed global citizens.
Definitions of learning Biggs (1999). ‘As we learn, our conceptions of phenomena change and we see the world differently. The acquisition of information in itself does not bring about such change, but the way we structure that information and think with it does. Thus education is about conceptual change, not just the acquisition of information.’ Barnett (1990). ‘The learning that goes on in higher education justifies the label “higher” precisely because it refers to a state of mind over and above the conventional recipe or factual learning.’ Cited in Brockbank and McGill (2007) pps 17-18
How can we support employability? • See case studies – lots of ideas and examples • This is not prescriptive – we hope it will stimulate creativity in psychology education and move the debate about aims, content and method onwards • Work experience for example • There is a sandwich placement tradition…. • Most students also work part-time… • …there is emerging practice in getting students to use, apply and reflect on psychology in their workplaces
Teaching for employability • Promote deep engagement with subject • An intention to understand, interest in a subject and a desire to achieve competence, read widely and relate new learning to previous knowledge, intrinsic motivation, use of evidence, inter-relating ideas. • Meaning is generated through conversation, student activity & interaction (Gibbs, 2002) • The teacher is critical in creating the ‘object of study’ for the student, needs to empathise so as to frame material in a way that can be understood.
Psychology is at the heart of employability • Itis the academic heart of work and organisational behaviour and informs human resource management, careers guidance, coaching and consultancy. • Psychologist, know thyself • We address the individual and are concerned with self-awareness, growth and development, social behaviour and cognition. • We are a strongly research-focused discipline and employability emphasises being able to bring research and critical thinking skills to bear.
Content 1 - Personal Development Planning • To help students “plan, integrate & take responsibility for their personal, career & academic development, identifying learning opportunities within their academic programmes & extra-curricular activities” • Uses personal profiles, skills audits, action plans, progress files, academic and personal records, learning portfolios and reflective logs to capture activity, reflection on activity and evidence of development. • Can be part of a structured tutorial programme, a work or placement preparation or a psychology in practice module • needs to be included early, be mandatory and credit bearing.
Curriculum content for employability 2 • Psychology of undergraduate and early adult development. • Teaching students about their own development can help them reflect on their changing thinking and reasoning • Lifespan development - Erikson (1978), Levinson (1996) • Late adolescent / early adult cognitive development / development of epistemological reasoning. Perry (1970) - evolution of male student reasoning from thinking dualistically, to taking multiple perspectives and using relativistic terms, and finally, to making a commitment to what they value. • Baxter Magolda (1992) development of epistemological reasoning in female students • Piaget, Vygotsky and Kohlberg - cognitive development and moral judgement in later childhood, adolescence and early adulthood.
Curriculum content for employability 3 • Cognitive psychology - meta cognition, meta-cognitive development and implications for study • Social psychology – relationships, their formation and dissolution • Personality psychology - occupational choice in the context of e.g. locus of control • Individual differences and career psychology • the ‘matching’ model - self-knowledge in relation to occupational information (e.g. Holland, 1985). • early adult move from idealism and exploration to greater realism taking account of life roles & context (e.g. Super,1979) • constructivist theory (Savickas, 2005) - vocational personality, life themes, and career adaptability • encourages individuals to go beyond objective understanding of types and traits to query their subjective experiences of themselves and the world around them.
Employability and the psychology professions • BSc Psychology vocational aspects are largely illusory – only 20% enter professional psychology, BSc only gets you to the start line • Students easily underestimate how difficult it is to enter the psychology professions • We all want our student to have the best shot at the psychology professions but needs a sensitive touch – see next slide • We must show our students • the breadth of opportunity they have as well as the routes into professional psychology • how a grounding in psychology (psychological literacy) has value and applicability in work and life
“I think we have been really pushed into (it)… a careers talk … that’s when it started … very, very early on in my degree. …when you do your placement, and you see people who are in that career … and they’re telling you, you know, we’ve done it, you can do it, and it’s having those people telling you that, that really pushes you... It definitely… was put on a pedestal as… this is one of the big jobs you can do… …one of those jobs that it’s so rewarding. …it can grow into you that clinical is the best of the best and if you achieve that you really have made it. Clinical psychology • Risks dominating career aspirations – positioned as the best career, and for the best • a red rag to the able, committed, focused and successful • placement year seen as a unique opportunity to short-cut the intense competition for graduate assistant posts • is it what students mean by psychology? • staff want all to be ambitious and to have opportunities • exposes poverty of students’ careers thinking; we need wider models