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      Developing graduate employability skills and attributes: Curriculum enhancement through work-integrated learning

      Rowe, Anna D.; Zegwaard, Karsten E.
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      2017 rowe zegwaard Asia-Pacific Journal of Cooperative Education.pdf
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      Rowe, A. D., & Zegwaard, K. E. (2017). Developing graduate employability skills and attributes: Curriculum enhancement through work-integrated learning. Asia-Pacific Journal of Cooperative Education, 18(2), 87–99.
      Permanent Research Commons link: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/11267
      Abstract
      Work-integrated learning (WIL) is considered a key strategy for promoting graduate employability. Graduate employability is a complex concept, one which has broadened in recent years to encapsulate a diverse range of skills, attributes, and other measures such as networks, professional-identity and active citizenship. This special issue presents recent scholarship on WIL and employability, addressing the question of how WIL contributes to enhancing employability outcomes for students and graduates. The importance of embedding WIL experiences in the curriculum so they are effectively supported by appropriate pedagogical strategies is emphasized, as well as the provision of quality assessment to support employability outcomes. Such supports, while critical, have resourcing implications for higher education, including impacts on staff workload which also need to be considered. Employability is considered in relation to the related construct of employment outcomes, pointing to ways in which these two perspectives can be better integrated. Recommendations are made for future research.
      Date
      2017
      Type
      Journal Article
      Rights
      This article is published in the Asia-Pacific Journal of Cooperative Education. Used with permission.
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      • Science and Engineering Papers [3124]
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