Saturday 24 May 2014

The Necessity For Career-Driven Instruction at U.S. Universities and Its Usefulness to Prospective Employers

By Mckinley Scott


Given the high numbers of recent college graduates who are jobless, it's clear that our institutions of higher education need to change their educational methodology. They must begin teaching students the crucial skills that will allow them to meet the needs of prospective employers, get hired, and hit the ground running when they graduate.

Our future grads need higher education curriculum that's bursting at the seams with experiences that model and transfer the essential abilities demanded by every industry - including communication, collaboration, leadership, innovation, and problem solving. Students must gain classroom as well as practical experience in these areas so that they can contribute and thrive in a diverse, globally-centric environment.

This can be realized in 5 ways:

- Competency-based assessment and degree structures must prevail and overtake obsolete course models.
- Soft skills such as communication, collaboration, and leadership must be emphasized, because without them, grads have will very low economic value to hiring organizations.
- The pricing structure for higher education must reflect graduation and employment outcomes and be linked to by ROI (Return on Investment).
- Curriculum must be increasingly delivered in modules and clusters of value where course structures provide students with rapid exposure to relevant and challenging content that corresponds to their passion and career focus.
- Hybrid models that enable a more efficient, and in most cases, more effectivedelivery of curriculum must be offered for such disciplines as entertainment and creative media arts, engineering, IT, and performance or practice-based disciplines. This methodology should gradually increase to other course areas, including business education. These updates will improve educational quality and decrease the overall expense of curriculum delivery.

Once these changes have been implemented, a number of benefits will accrue for students and their ultimate employers, including:

- Employers will start to differentiate between graduates who are prepared and those who aren't, and will depend less on college brand names to ascertain the quality of potential hires.
- Education and industry engagement will expand, resulting in more productive curriculum and more employment-ready grads.
- Institutes of higher education that support competency-based, collaboration-driven, and employer-centric curriculum delivery models will be recognized by students and their employers for the value and innovation that they offer.

This institutional alignment of successful student preparation with the needs of prospective employers will yield improved enrollments for the higher education providers; enhanced career opportunities for students; and better prepared, more productive, and more capable workforces for employers.




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