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Showing 16 to 30 of 73 results Save | Export
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Rosemond, Marie Michelle; Owens, Delila – College Student Journal, 2020
This article provides an overview of the literature on Arnett's emerging adulthood theory with a focus on emerging adult collegians job search process. Emerging adulthood theory and Schlossberg's transition theory are important conceptual underpinnings to study how recent college graduates handled transitions as graduates navigated from…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Coping, Young Adults, Unemployment
Brittany N. Dernberger – ProQuest LLC, 2020
A recent college graduate working as a coffee shop barista, earning minimum wage and carrying thousands of dollars in student loan debt, is a familiar trope in conversations about the value of a bachelor's degree. In the college-for-all era, young people are encouraged to attain a bachelor's degree to bolster their labor market opportunities…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Employment Level, Employment Qualifications
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Mongkolhutthi, Preechaya – LEARN Journal: Language Education and Acquisition Research Network, 2022
This case study explores the working condition of expatriate native English speaker lecturers at a higher educational institution in Thailand regarding the extent of their workplace support and how they perceive the support given. Primary and secondary data from expatriate lecturers (n=8) and administrators of the context (n=4) demonstrate that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Native Speakers, English
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Hunt, Wil; Scott, Peter – Studies in Higher Education, 2020
Secondary analysis of the UK's 2011/12 Destinations of Leavers from Higher Education survey reveals that many existing assumptions about graduate internships are questionable. This article proposes a reliable way of estimating the true extent of internships including those reported as 'voluntary' jobs: hidden internships. In doing so the article…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Graduates, Internship Programs, Employment Potential
Ball, Charlie – Universities UK, 2022
Some say that there are too many people going to university, and others have spent many years lamenting that they cannot find the graduates they need. What is the actual state of the graduate labour market? How many graduates actually are there? How is a graduate job defined, and how many people are there in them? And what does the future hold for…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, College Graduates, Employment Potential, Labor Market
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Sellami, Sana; Verhaest, Dieter; Nonneman, Walter; Van Trier, Walter – Education Economics, 2020
Relying on data for Belgian graduates, we investigate the relationship between motives to participate in higher education (investment, educational consumption, student life consumption and social norms) and overeducation after graduation. We also examine whether these motives affect the relationship between overeducation and other outcomes like…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Job Satisfaction, Behavior Standards
Batalova, Jeanne; Fix, Michael – Migration Policy Institute, 2018
Migration Policy Institute (MPI) research finds that nearly 2 million, or one-quarter, of immigrant college graduates are either unemployed or work in jobs that require no more than a high school degree. This brain waste comes with a price tag of $10 billion in forgone federal, state, and local taxes each year. But there are also…
Descriptors: Immigrants, College Graduates, Employment Patterns, Human Capital
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Jackson, Denise – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2021
This study explores industry perspectives on the changing nature of graduate roles and the importance of the undergraduate degree, and any impact these have on traditional non-graduate roles in different sectors and industries. Amid declining labour markets, it is critical to consider graduate pathways to employment and the implications of…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Bachelors Degrees, College Graduates, Education Work Relationship
Jobs for the Future, 2019
Roughly 75 million Americans don't have the work or wages they need to get by. They either lack the skills employers seek or can't access jobs with sufficient pay. These are America's untapped workers--people who are unemployed or underemployed, but who can succeed in the nation's rapidly changing economy if offered the right education, training,…
Descriptors: Federal Programs, Job Skills, Job Training, Labor Force Development
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Heil, John-Paul; McGinley, Stephen – Journal of Catholic Higher Education, 2021
As higher education emerges from COVID-19 restrictions, the post-pandemic transitional moment provides Catholic institutions the opportunity to reconsider their reliance on adjuncts in core curricula. As tenure-track positions decline nationwide and universities increasingly source out coursework to temporary or part-time adjuncts and other…
Descriptors: Catholics, Religious Factors, Religious Colleges, College Faculty
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Witt, Phyllis A.; Gearin, Christopher A. – Research in Education, 2021
Higher education institutions are heavily reliant on part-time adjuncts to teach their students. These part-time adjuncts now account for the majority of faculty in the United States. This qualitative study utilizes a phenomenological approach to explore the essence of the lived experiences of part-time adjuncts who travel to more than one…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, College Faculty, Barriers, Part Time Faculty
Canadian Association of University Teachers, 2018
Concerns about a bias against the hiring of Canadian and permanent resident academics arose in the late 1960s. With a wave of hiring unleashed by the expansion of the university and college system over the previous decade, evidence was mounting that Canadian candidates were routinely being rejected in favour of international applicants,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Immigrants, Foreign Nationals
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Acosta-Ballesteros, Juan; Osorno-del Rosal, María del Pilar; Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Olga María – Journal of Education and Work, 2018
The objective of this paper is to identify the effect of education on young workers' time-related underemployment as well as analysing whether education has been a defence mechanism against the recent crisis. Especially relevant is the analysis regarding field of study, which has not been addressed in the underemployment literature. Using data…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Underemployment, Employment, Education Work Relationship
Gould, Elise; Mokhiber, Zane; Wolfe, Julia – Economic Policy Institute, 2019
Fallout from the Great Recession did a lot of damage to the employment prospects of young adults just entering the workforce after graduating from high school or college--and that damage persisted well into the recovery. In this study, the authors analyze data on recent young college graduates (ages 21-24) to learn about the Class of 2019's…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Graduate Study, Employment Level, Unemployment
Jobs for the Future, 2019
A growing number of employers identify difficulty hiring highly qualified workers as their top competitive challenge. Roughly 75 million of Americans could meet these employer needs but currently lack the skills or supports to do so. This is America's untapped workforce--the many people who do not have the work or wages they need to get by, but…
Descriptors: Labor Force Development, Talent Development, Job Skills, Education Work Relationship
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