Driving the career readiness agenda in Hong Kong higher education

The concept of “career readiness” can trace its origin to earlier studies about learning and employability in higher education as well as management of student life cycle. Since then, career readiness has evolved into a major concern for public funders and regulators of higher education. Policy rese...

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Main Author: Benjamin Tak Yuen Chan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2023.1325592/full
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author Benjamin Tak Yuen Chan
author_facet Benjamin Tak Yuen Chan
author_sort Benjamin Tak Yuen Chan
collection DOAJ
description The concept of “career readiness” can trace its origin to earlier studies about learning and employability in higher education as well as management of student life cycle. Since then, career readiness has evolved into a major concern for public funders and regulators of higher education. Policy researchers contend that following the expansion of higher education and subsequent institutional commitment to ensuring student success, the current stage is about emphasizing employability as the primary indicator of graduate outcomes. This policy shift projects the university-employer interface into the spotlight and creates a favorable condition for promoting work-based experiential learning in higher education. While all postsecondary education institutions in Hong Kong give due regard to graduate employment as a measure of successful “university to work transition,” most of them however do not offer structured courses to train their students in skills for lifetime employability. This leads to the question of whether the status quo is desirable and what would be an effective lever for effecting change. Should coaching students for career readiness remain the responsibility of career development office or can academic staff also have a role to play in supporting it? What are the different approaches for teaching about “work life” in the crowded undergraduate curriculum space? Answers to the above would depend on how much the higher education sector in Hong Kong is prepared to embark on a “whole-of-life” approach to develop “work conscious” and not just “work ready” graduates. The new direction will help to generate a positive effect on higher education institutions in Hong Kong for them to compete through curricular and pedagogical innovations in support of the career-readiness agenda.
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spelling doaj.art-c7aa2c03958845678470d250e47862962023-12-01T19:16:51ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Education2504-284X2023-12-01810.3389/feduc.2023.13255921325592Driving the career readiness agenda in Hong Kong higher educationBenjamin Tak Yuen ChanThe concept of “career readiness” can trace its origin to earlier studies about learning and employability in higher education as well as management of student life cycle. Since then, career readiness has evolved into a major concern for public funders and regulators of higher education. Policy researchers contend that following the expansion of higher education and subsequent institutional commitment to ensuring student success, the current stage is about emphasizing employability as the primary indicator of graduate outcomes. This policy shift projects the university-employer interface into the spotlight and creates a favorable condition for promoting work-based experiential learning in higher education. While all postsecondary education institutions in Hong Kong give due regard to graduate employment as a measure of successful “university to work transition,” most of them however do not offer structured courses to train their students in skills for lifetime employability. This leads to the question of whether the status quo is desirable and what would be an effective lever for effecting change. Should coaching students for career readiness remain the responsibility of career development office or can academic staff also have a role to play in supporting it? What are the different approaches for teaching about “work life” in the crowded undergraduate curriculum space? Answers to the above would depend on how much the higher education sector in Hong Kong is prepared to embark on a “whole-of-life” approach to develop “work conscious” and not just “work ready” graduates. The new direction will help to generate a positive effect on higher education institutions in Hong Kong for them to compete through curricular and pedagogical innovations in support of the career-readiness agenda.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2023.1325592/fullcareer readinessemployabilitywork consciouswork readyworking lifework-based experiential learning
spellingShingle Benjamin Tak Yuen Chan
Driving the career readiness agenda in Hong Kong higher education
Frontiers in Education
career readiness
employability
work conscious
work ready
working life
work-based experiential learning
title Driving the career readiness agenda in Hong Kong higher education
title_full Driving the career readiness agenda in Hong Kong higher education
title_fullStr Driving the career readiness agenda in Hong Kong higher education
title_full_unstemmed Driving the career readiness agenda in Hong Kong higher education
title_short Driving the career readiness agenda in Hong Kong higher education
title_sort driving the career readiness agenda in hong kong higher education
topic career readiness
employability
work conscious
work ready
working life
work-based experiential learning
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feduc.2023.1325592/full
work_keys_str_mv AT benjamintakyuenchan drivingthecareerreadinessagendainhongkonghighereducation