Graduate generic competences from the perspective of VNU employers
The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated a shift to new ways of working, prompting companies to reimagine how, where and by whom work gets done (World Economic Forum & Watson, 2020). This shift was already under way with the technological changes of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Employers are l...
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doaj-88735afb778045e099e8181a4850551a2020-12-14T20:09:28ZengDeakin UniversityJournal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability1838-38152020-10-0111113114510.21153/jtlge2020vol11no1art923923Graduate generic competences from the perspective of VNU employersMai Thi Quynh Lan0Vietnam National University, VietnamThe COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated a shift to new ways of working, prompting companies to reimagine how, where and by whom work gets done (World Economic Forum & Watson, 2020). This shift was already under way with the technological changes of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Employers are looking for workers who are able to learn new knowledge and skills, adapt to the workplace, be sufficiently flexible to move jobs, and expand on the knowledge learnt at university. Applying the theory of generic competences and the model of thirteen generic competences for university graduates of the Tuning Asia - South East project (TASE), this research investigates the perspectives of VNU stakeholders about the generic competences of VNU graduates. In particular, this paper discusses the employers’ perspective of VNU graduates’ generic competences. Although employers rate all generic competences as important, they evaluated graduates’ achievement of seven generic competences as being at a less than satisfactory level. The findings of the research point to the need for the university to focus more on developing generic competences throughout the delivery of programs.https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/923employer perspectivegraduatesgeneric competencesvietnam national university hanoi (vnu) |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mai Thi Quynh Lan |
spellingShingle |
Mai Thi Quynh Lan Graduate generic competences from the perspective of VNU employers Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability employer perspective graduates generic competences vietnam national university hanoi (vnu) |
author_facet |
Mai Thi Quynh Lan |
author_sort |
Mai Thi Quynh Lan |
title |
Graduate generic competences from the perspective of VNU employers |
title_short |
Graduate generic competences from the perspective of VNU employers |
title_full |
Graduate generic competences from the perspective of VNU employers |
title_fullStr |
Graduate generic competences from the perspective of VNU employers |
title_full_unstemmed |
Graduate generic competences from the perspective of VNU employers |
title_sort |
graduate generic competences from the perspective of vnu employers |
publisher |
Deakin University |
series |
Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability |
issn |
1838-3815 |
publishDate |
2020-10-01 |
description |
The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated a shift to new ways of working, prompting companies to reimagine how, where and by whom work gets done (World Economic Forum & Watson, 2020). This shift was already under way with the technological changes of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Employers are looking for workers who are able to learn new knowledge and skills, adapt to the workplace, be sufficiently flexible to move jobs, and expand on the knowledge learnt at university. Applying the theory of generic competences and the model of thirteen generic competences for university graduates of the Tuning Asia - South East project (TASE), this research investigates the perspectives of VNU stakeholders about the generic competences of VNU graduates. In particular, this paper discusses the employers’ perspective of VNU graduates’ generic competences. Although employers rate all generic competences as important, they evaluated graduates’ achievement of seven generic competences as being at a less than satisfactory level. The findings of the research point to the need for the university to focus more on developing generic competences throughout the delivery of programs. |
topic |
employer perspective graduates generic competences vietnam national university hanoi (vnu) |
url |
https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/923 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT maithiquynhlan graduategenericcompetencesfromtheperspectiveofvnuemployers |
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