Work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: A review of current assessment methods

Graduate recruitment and selection differs from other contexts in that graduate applicants generally lack job-related experience. Recent research has highlighted that employers are placing increasing value on graduates being work ready. Work readiness is believed to be indicative of graduate poten...

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Main Authors: Catherine Lissette Caballero, Arlene Walker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Deakin University 2010-08-01
Series:Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/546
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spelling doaj-62c0cb79c1d84a7a9ee0d6f68c4d21b82020-11-25T03:31:50ZengDeakin UniversityJournal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability1838-38152010-08-0111132510.21153/jtlge2010vol1no1art546501Work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: A review of current assessment methodsCatherine Lissette Caballero0Arlene WalkerDeakin UniversityGraduate recruitment and selection differs from other contexts in that graduate applicants generally lack job-related experience. Recent research has highlighted that employers are placing increasing value on graduates being work ready. Work readiness is believed to be indicative of graduate potential in terms of long term job performance and career advancement. A review of the literature has found that current graduate recruitment and selection practices lack the rigour and construct validity to effectively assess work readiness. In addition, the variety of interchangeable terms and definitions articulated by employers and academics on what constitutes work readiness suggests the need to further refine this construct. This paper argues that work readiness is an important selection criterion, and should be examined systematically in the graduate assessment process, as a construct in itself. The ineffectiveness of current assessment methods in being able to measure work readiness supports the need to develop a specific measure of work readiness that will allow more effective decision practices and potentially predict long term job capacity and performance.https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/546work readiness, graduate employability, graduate recruitment, graduate selection, graduate assessment, transferable skills, graduate competencies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine Lissette Caballero
Arlene Walker
spellingShingle Catherine Lissette Caballero
Arlene Walker
Work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: A review of current assessment methods
Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability
work readiness, graduate employability, graduate recruitment, graduate selection, graduate assessment, transferable skills, graduate competencies
author_facet Catherine Lissette Caballero
Arlene Walker
author_sort Catherine Lissette Caballero
title Work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: A review of current assessment methods
title_short Work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: A review of current assessment methods
title_full Work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: A review of current assessment methods
title_fullStr Work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: A review of current assessment methods
title_full_unstemmed Work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: A review of current assessment methods
title_sort work readiness in graduate recruitment and selection: a review of current assessment methods
publisher Deakin University
series Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability
issn 1838-3815
publishDate 2010-08-01
description Graduate recruitment and selection differs from other contexts in that graduate applicants generally lack job-related experience. Recent research has highlighted that employers are placing increasing value on graduates being work ready. Work readiness is believed to be indicative of graduate potential in terms of long term job performance and career advancement. A review of the literature has found that current graduate recruitment and selection practices lack the rigour and construct validity to effectively assess work readiness. In addition, the variety of interchangeable terms and definitions articulated by employers and academics on what constitutes work readiness suggests the need to further refine this construct. This paper argues that work readiness is an important selection criterion, and should be examined systematically in the graduate assessment process, as a construct in itself. The ineffectiveness of current assessment methods in being able to measure work readiness supports the need to develop a specific measure of work readiness that will allow more effective decision practices and potentially predict long term job capacity and performance.
topic work readiness, graduate employability, graduate recruitment, graduate selection, graduate assessment, transferable skills, graduate competencies
url https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/546
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