The role of numeracy skills in graduate employability

Purpose - The purpose of this article is to explore the role and importance of numeracy skills in graduate recruitment within a diversity of employment sectors.Design methodology approach - The results of a mixed-methods study, involving three online surveys (including an employer survey), student f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Education & training (London) 2012-01, Vol.54 (5), p.419-434
Hauptverfasser: Durrani, Naureen, Tariq, Vicki N
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Tariq, Vicki N
description Purpose - The purpose of this article is to explore the role and importance of numeracy skills in graduate recruitment within a diversity of employment sectors.Design methodology approach - The results of a mixed-methods study, involving three online surveys (including an employer survey), student focus group sessions and interviews with tutors, are presented.Findings - The results reveal the importance that employers attach to graduates' numeracy skills and the extent to which employers use numeracy tests in graduate recruitment. They thus highlight the potential for poor numeracy skills to limit any graduate's acquisition of employment, irrespective of their degree subject; especially since numeracy tests are used predominantly in recruitment to the types of jobs commensurate with graduates' career aspirations and within sectors that attract graduates from across the diversity of academic disciplines, including the arts and humanities.Research limitations implications - Since participants were self-selecting any conclusions and inferences relate to the samples and may or may not be generalisable to wider target populations.Practical implications - The paper highlights what actions are necessary to enhance undergraduates' numeracy skills in the context of graduate employability.Social implications - The vulnerability of particular groups of students (e.g. females, those not provided with any opportunities to practise or further develop their numeracy skills whilst in higher education, those with no (or low) pre-university mathematics qualifications, and mature students) is highlighted.Originality value - The article is timely in view of national policy to extend the graduate employability performance indicators within quality assurance measures for UK higher education.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/00400911211244704
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ispartof Education & training (London), 2012-01, Vol.54 (5), p.419-434
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source Emerald Journals
subjects Adult literacy
Attitude Measures
College Faculty
College Graduates
College students
Communication Skills
Employer Attitudes
Employers
Employment
Employment Potential
Employment Qualifications
Exports
Focus Groups
Foreign Countries
Gender Differences
Graduates
Higher Education
Humanities
Individual Characteristics
Inferences
Intellectual Disciplines
Job Skills
Literacy
Mathematics Activities
Mathematics Skills
Numeracy
Online Surveys
Polls & surveys
Quality Control
Questionnaires
Recruitment
Skills
Student Attitudes
Student Placement
Studies
Tutoring
Tutors
Undergraduate Students
United Kingdom
title The role of numeracy skills in graduate employability
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