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Cook, Elizabeth J. – Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability, 2022
Increasingly governments expect universities to improve graduate employment outcomes. Universities respond by implementing employability strategies in, alongside and outside curricula, with debates ongoing about whether employability is part of the curriculum, why and how. The context and process of employability is commonly framed in neoliberal…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Employment Potential, Models, Neoliberalism
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Jonbekova, Dilrabo; Serkova, Yevgeniya; Mazbulova, Zhanar; Jumakulov, Zakir; Ruby, Alan – Higher Education Research and Development, 2023
Many countries offer government scholarships for international higher education and expect the recipients to contribute to national development. While there are many benefits from these scholarship programmes, they have been criticized as expensive. We examine the perceived contribution of Kazakhstan's two government scholarship alumni to the…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, International Education, Economic Development, Scholarships
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Singh, Jasvir Kaur Nachatar; Fan, Shea X. – Journal of Education and Work, 2021
This article investigates how international educational experiences affect the employment opportunities of Chinese who graduated from an Australian university. Findings based on 26 semi-structured interviews highlight that Chinese students who graduated from Australia gained a web of capital (i.e., human, cultural, psychological and identity),…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Employment Potential, Educational Experience, Employment Opportunities
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Tomlinson, Michael – Education & Training, 2017
Purpose: In the context of far-reaching changes in higher education and the labour market, there has been extensive discussion on what constitutes graduate employability and what shapes graduates' labour market outcomes. Many of these discussions are based on skills-centred approaches and related supply-side logic. The purpose of this paper is to…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Employment Potential, Human Capital, Social Capital
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Xiaohao, Ding; Feifei, Zhu – Chinese Education & Society, 2018
Investment of time in internship and in-school learning or study are two ways to accumulate human capital for college students. The authors take I&S input as two impacting factors for graduates' starting salaries to construct an I&S input allocation model minimizing "psychological cost." The model inference indicates that the…
Descriptors: College Students, Human Capital, Salaries, Foreign Countries
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Oketch, Moses – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2016
The purpose of this article is to discuss how best to finance higher education in low-income countries of sub-Saharan Africa, drawing on benefits and drawbacks of the prevalent models of higher education finance, and lessons to be learned from countries which have seen greater expansion of their higher education systems in recent decades. Two main…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Finance, Sustainable Development, Low Income
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Nauman, Sarwat; Hussain, Nasreen – Journal of Education for Business, 2017
Economic growth of Pakistan through the banking sector relies heavily on the human capital dispensed to them by the Pakistani business schools. A conceptual model of the continuous improvement cycle for building human capital is developed through a literature review, with the aim of helping to generate human capital. Six semistructured interviews…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Business Schools, Sustainability
Sahin, Aysegul – Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 2004
This paper uses a game-theoretic model to analyze the disincentive effects of low-tuition policies on student effort. The model of parent and student responses to tuition subsidies is then calibrated using information from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 and the High School and Beyond Sophomore Cohort: 1980-92. I find that although…
Descriptors: Human Capital, College Graduates, Grants, Tuition