{"title":"社论:十颗星特刊","authors":"Shelley Kinash, T. Jorre de st Jorre","doi":"10.21153/JTLGE2019VOL10NO1ART849","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This special issue was produced by the TEN-STARS network, an international network of tertiary staff, students, graduates and employers dedicated to furthering research and practice related to graduate employability. The Employability Network, was formed at the 2018 STARS conference (www.unistars.org) in response to shared interests that are very much aligned to those of the Journal of Learning and Teaching for Graduate Employability. It is therefore with great pleasure that we introduce the Journal’s first special issue, which is also the network’s first collaborative output.The first issue of the Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability was published in 2010, ‘as a forum for fostering interdisciplinary dialogue among researchers, teacher scholars, careers staff and industry and professional practitioners concerned about graduate employability’ (Quin, 2010). Almost ten years on, dialogue among those key stakeholders is no less important, and assuring graduate employability remains a challenge that spans international contexts. In fact, with growing global uncertainty related to rapid technological developments and the changing world of work, alongside other equally concerning social and political disruptions, the preparation of graduates to face uncertainty in and beyond the workforce is arguably more important than ever (Oliver & Jorre de St Jorre, 2018). Fortunately, thanks to the dedication of many, and platforms such as this Journal, there is now an expansive and growing body of research and evidence based practice that can be drawn upon - to design, question, and redesign - teaching and learning for graduate employability.Universities and academics are often at the centre of discourse about graduate employability, but in reality, concerns and responsibilities are shared more broadly amongst: leaders of tertiary institutions (university and non-university providers); academics in and beyond traditional faculty roles; and other staff who contribute to the student experience and graduate outcomes through diverse roles (such as those that contribute to career learning services, learning design, and student support, to name just a few). Students, graduates, employers and professional associations, as well as government and quality assurance agencies, are also key stakeholders, whose influence and perspectives are essential to developing effective strategies (Kinash, Crane, Judd, & Knight, 2015; Kinash, et al., 2015). With this in mind, the TEN-STARS network was convened by Professor Shelley Kinash, to encourage and support collaboration between all those interested in continuing to discuss, inform, and influence graduate employability. This special issue, was conceived as a way of sharing some of the network’s diverse and collective expertise with a broader audience, who are also invited to become part of our network (https://tenstars.graduateemployability.com/).All of the papers in this TEN STARS Special Issue are empirical, theoretically grounded and richly informed by the growing body of published employability literature. The roles and experience of our contributing authors are diverse, as are their research questions, methods and methodologies. However, all of the inquiries shared have been designed to impact graduate employability, so they are all contextualised to tertiary education, and provide recommendations for further research and efficacious practice related to learning and teaching for employability. Importantly, none of the approaches examined are bolt-ons (requiring already busy students to do more). Rather, authors have focussed on deeply considered approaches to designing and refining the tertiary educational experience, so that employability and careers perspectives are embedded in the student learning experience, and deeply contextualised to disciplines.","PeriodicalId":37004,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-05-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial: TEN STARS Special Issue\",\"authors\":\"Shelley Kinash, T. Jorre de st Jorre\",\"doi\":\"10.21153/JTLGE2019VOL10NO1ART849\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This special issue was produced by the TEN-STARS network, an international network of tertiary staff, students, graduates and employers dedicated to furthering research and practice related to graduate employability. 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In fact, with growing global uncertainty related to rapid technological developments and the changing world of work, alongside other equally concerning social and political disruptions, the preparation of graduates to face uncertainty in and beyond the workforce is arguably more important than ever (Oliver & Jorre de St Jorre, 2018). Fortunately, thanks to the dedication of many, and platforms such as this Journal, there is now an expansive and growing body of research and evidence based practice that can be drawn upon - to design, question, and redesign - teaching and learning for graduate employability.Universities and academics are often at the centre of discourse about graduate employability, but in reality, concerns and responsibilities are shared more broadly amongst: leaders of tertiary institutions (university and non-university providers); academics in and beyond traditional faculty roles; and other staff who contribute to the student experience and graduate outcomes through diverse roles (such as those that contribute to career learning services, learning design, and student support, to name just a few). Students, graduates, employers and professional associations, as well as government and quality assurance agencies, are also key stakeholders, whose influence and perspectives are essential to developing effective strategies (Kinash, Crane, Judd, & Knight, 2015; Kinash, et al., 2015). With this in mind, the TEN-STARS network was convened by Professor Shelley Kinash, to encourage and support collaboration between all those interested in continuing to discuss, inform, and influence graduate employability. This special issue, was conceived as a way of sharing some of the network’s diverse and collective expertise with a broader audience, who are also invited to become part of our network (https://tenstars.graduateemployability.com/).All of the papers in this TEN STARS Special Issue are empirical, theoretically grounded and richly informed by the growing body of published employability literature. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本期特刊由TEN-STARS网络制作,该网络是一个由高等教育员工、学生、毕业生和雇主组成的国际网络,致力于进一步研究和实践与毕业生就业能力有关的问题。就业能力网络是在2018年STARS会议(www.unistars.org)上成立的,旨在响应与《研究生就业能力学习与教学杂志》非常一致的共同利益。因此,我们非常高兴地推出《华尔街日报》的第一期特刊,这也是该网络的第一次合作产出。《毕业生就业能力的教学》杂志的第一期于2010年出版,“作为一个论坛,促进研究人员、教师学者、职业人员以及关注毕业生就业能力的行业和专业从业者之间的跨学科对话”(Quin, 2010)。近十年过去了,这些关键利益相关者之间的对话同样重要,确保毕业生的就业能力仍然是一个跨越国际背景的挑战。事实上,随着与快速技术发展和不断变化的工作世界相关的全球不确定性日益增加,以及其他同样令人担忧的社会和政治动荡,毕业生面对劳动力市场内外的不确定性的准备可以说比以往任何时候都更加重要(Oliver & Jorre de St Jorre, 2018)。幸运的是,由于许多人的奉献,以及像本杂志这样的平台,现在有一个广泛的、不断增长的研究和基于证据的实践体系,可以用来设计、质疑和重新设计毕业生就业能力的教学和学习。大学和学术界经常是关于毕业生就业能力的讨论的中心,但实际上,高等教育机构(大学和非大学提供者)的领导者更广泛地分担了关注和责任;超越传统教师角色的学者;以及其他通过不同角色为学生体验和毕业成果做出贡献的员工(例如那些为职业学习服务、学习设计和学生支持做出贡献的员工,仅举几例)。学生、毕业生、雇主和专业协会,以及政府和质量保证机构,也是关键的利益相关者,他们的影响力和观点对于制定有效的战略至关重要(Kinash, Crane, Judd, & Knight, 2015;Kinash等人,2015)。考虑到这一点,10 - stars网络由Shelley Kinash教授召集,以鼓励和支持所有有兴趣继续讨论,告知和影响毕业生就业能力的人之间的合作。本期特刊旨在与更广泛的受众分享网络的多样性和集体专业知识,这些受众也被邀请成为我们网络的一部分(https://tenstars.graduateemployability.com/).All),本期《十大之星》特刊中的论文是经验主义的,理论基础的,并且从越来越多的已发表的就业能力文献中获得了丰富的信息。我们的贡献作者的角色和经验是多种多样的,因为他们的研究问题,方法和方法。然而,所有分享的调查都是为了影响毕业生的就业能力而设计的,因此它们都是在高等教育的背景下进行的,并为进一步的研究和与就业能力的学习和教学相关的有效实践提供了建议。重要的是,没有一种方法是附加的(要求已经很忙的学生做更多的事情)。相反,作者们专注于深入思考设计和完善高等教育经验的方法,以便将就业能力和职业前景嵌入学生的学习经验中,并深入到学科背景中。
This special issue was produced by the TEN-STARS network, an international network of tertiary staff, students, graduates and employers dedicated to furthering research and practice related to graduate employability. The Employability Network, was formed at the 2018 STARS conference (www.unistars.org) in response to shared interests that are very much aligned to those of the Journal of Learning and Teaching for Graduate Employability. It is therefore with great pleasure that we introduce the Journal’s first special issue, which is also the network’s first collaborative output.The first issue of the Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability was published in 2010, ‘as a forum for fostering interdisciplinary dialogue among researchers, teacher scholars, careers staff and industry and professional practitioners concerned about graduate employability’ (Quin, 2010). Almost ten years on, dialogue among those key stakeholders is no less important, and assuring graduate employability remains a challenge that spans international contexts. In fact, with growing global uncertainty related to rapid technological developments and the changing world of work, alongside other equally concerning social and political disruptions, the preparation of graduates to face uncertainty in and beyond the workforce is arguably more important than ever (Oliver & Jorre de St Jorre, 2018). Fortunately, thanks to the dedication of many, and platforms such as this Journal, there is now an expansive and growing body of research and evidence based practice that can be drawn upon - to design, question, and redesign - teaching and learning for graduate employability.Universities and academics are often at the centre of discourse about graduate employability, but in reality, concerns and responsibilities are shared more broadly amongst: leaders of tertiary institutions (university and non-university providers); academics in and beyond traditional faculty roles; and other staff who contribute to the student experience and graduate outcomes through diverse roles (such as those that contribute to career learning services, learning design, and student support, to name just a few). Students, graduates, employers and professional associations, as well as government and quality assurance agencies, are also key stakeholders, whose influence and perspectives are essential to developing effective strategies (Kinash, Crane, Judd, & Knight, 2015; Kinash, et al., 2015). With this in mind, the TEN-STARS network was convened by Professor Shelley Kinash, to encourage and support collaboration between all those interested in continuing to discuss, inform, and influence graduate employability. This special issue, was conceived as a way of sharing some of the network’s diverse and collective expertise with a broader audience, who are also invited to become part of our network (https://tenstars.graduateemployability.com/).All of the papers in this TEN STARS Special Issue are empirical, theoretically grounded and richly informed by the growing body of published employability literature. The roles and experience of our contributing authors are diverse, as are their research questions, methods and methodologies. However, all of the inquiries shared have been designed to impact graduate employability, so they are all contextualised to tertiary education, and provide recommendations for further research and efficacious practice related to learning and teaching for employability. Importantly, none of the approaches examined are bolt-ons (requiring already busy students to do more). Rather, authors have focussed on deeply considered approaches to designing and refining the tertiary educational experience, so that employability and careers perspectives are embedded in the student learning experience, and deeply contextualised to disciplines.