References

This database has been compiled to provide a searchable repository on published research addressing “future skills” that will be a useful tool for researchers and individuals interested in the future of work and the future of skills.

The database integrates existing bibliographies focused on future skills and the future of work as well as the results of new ProQuest and Google Scholar searches. The process of building the database also involved consultations with experts and the identification of key research organizations publishing in this area, as well as searches of those organizations’ websites. For a more detailed explanation of how the database was assembled, please read the Future Skills Reference Database Technical Note.

The current database, assembled by future skills researchers at the Diversity Institute, is not exhaustive but represents a first step in building a more comprehensive database. It will be regularly updated and expanded as new material is published and identified. In that vein, we encourage those with suggestions for improvements to this database to connect with us directly at di.fsc@ryerson.ca.

From this database, we also selected 39 key publications and created an Annotated Bibliography. It is designed to serve as a useful tool for researchers, especially Canadian researchers, who may need some initial guidance in terms of the key references in this area.

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2914 results

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Journal Article

Competencies, occupational status, and earnings among European university graduatesexternal link icon

2018: Blazquez, M., Herrarte, A., and Llorente-Heras, R. Elsevier paywall icon
While the effect of education and experience on labour market outcomes has been widely studied, the literature that analyses the influence of human capital competencies (talents, skills, and capabilities) is still relatively scarce. Using cross-sectional data from the [Flexible Professional in the Knowledge Society REFLEX Project, we investigate the effect of personal competencies (both cognitive and non-cognitive) on two labour market outcomes among European university graduates: occupational status and earnings. Our estimates suggest that individuals endowed with a higher level of competencies are more likely to occupy managerial and professional positions and, to a lesser extent, technician jobs. Additionally, they also receive higher wages, but the relation is only significant for men. When we distinguish competencies according to their cognitive or non-cognitive nature, we find that only the latter are significant in explaining occupational status. In contrast, cognitive competencies are more related with wages. As regards the role of specific competencies, our findings suggest that leadership is the most relevant competence for the occupational status of males, especially in managerial positions. In contrast, initiative and enterprise abilities seem to be the most relevant skills for women in such positions. Intelligence produces the highest rewards in terms of earnings among the male sub-sample, while none of the competencies exerts a significant impact on females' wages.
Blazquez, M., Herrarte, A., and Llorente-Heras, R. (2018). Competencies, occupational status, and earnings among European university graduates. Economics of Education Review, 62, 16-34 . Retrieved from https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0272775717306398.
Journal Article

Challenges and strategies for assessing student workplace performance during work-integrated learningexternal link icon

2018: Jackson, D. Edith Cowan University paywall icon
This study explores the challenges of assessing student workplace performance during work-integrated learning. It highlights the need for, yet difficulties with, combining positivist and constructivist assessments where workplace supervisors make evaluative judgements on performance, yet students are also agents in their own assessment. It examines the ratings awarded by 163 workplace supervisors for 213 business undergraduates completing a work placement as part of their degree program in Western Australia. Students were rated on 17 capabilities associated with employability and results indicate, in alignment with previous studies, a tendency among supervisors to assign inflated marks across capabilities. The mean capability rating awarded to each student was significantly higher than their weighted course average, suggesting workplace supervisors mark more highly than academics in coursework units. To identify solutions to manage leniency bias, the study examined variations in supervisor ratings for a range of personal and contextual variables such as gender, organisation size, work area, and sector. Although supervisor ratings were inflated, they were consistent across the sample with variations recorded for only four capabilities in certain work areas. Reasons for leniency bias among workplace supervisors are explored in light of the findings and alternative approaches to evaluating student workplace performance are presented.
Jackson, D. (2018). Challenges and strategies for assessing student workplace performance during work-integrated learning. Assessment and Evaluation in Brighter Education, 43(4), 555-570 . Retrieved from https://ro.ecu.edu.au/ecuworkspost2013/4476/.
Journal Article

Caught up in the past?: Social inclusion, skills, and vocational education and training policy in Englandexternal link icon

2018: Fleckenstein, T. and Lee, S. Taylor & Francis Group paywall icon
Since the mid-1990s, governments of different political persuasion have tried to reform VET policy to address problems in skills formation and social inclusion. Despite considerable policy activism, success has been somewhat limited, and England failed to overcome the problems associated with its liberal training regime. This article assesses the failure in vocational skills formation as a political economy and a public policy problem. It challenges the determinism in the political economy literature, points to poor public policy-making, and outlines possible policy levers.
Fleckenstein, T. and Lee, S. (2018). Caught up in the past?: Social inclusion, skills, and vocational education and training policy in England. Journal of Education and Work, 31(2), 109-124 . Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1080/13639080.2018.1433820 .
Journal Article

Can students be taught to articulate employability skills?external link icon

2019: Tomasson Goodwin, J., Goh, J., Verkoeyen, S., and Lithgow, K. Emerald Publishing Limited paywall icon
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to report on research findings from a teaching and learning intervention that explored whether undergraduate university students can be taught to articulate their employability skills effectively to prospective employers and to retain this ability post-course. Design/methodology/approach: The study included 3,400 students in 44 courses at a large Canadian university. Stage 1 involved a course-level teaching and learning intervention with the experimental student group, which received employability skills articulation instruction. Stage 2 involved an online survey administered six months post-course to the experimental group and the control group. Both groups responded to two randomly generated questions using the Situation/Task, Actions, Result (STAR) format, a format that employers commonly rely on to assess job candidates' employability skills. The researchers compared the survey responses from the experimental and control groups. Findings: Survey results demonstrate that previous exposure to the STAR format was the only significant factor affecting students' skills articulation ability. Year of study and program (co-operative or non-co-operative) did not influence articulation. Practical implications: The findings suggest that universities should integrate institution-wide, course-level employability skills articulation assignments for students in all years of study and programs (co-op and non-co-op). Originality/value: This research is novel because its study design combines practical, instructional design with empirical research of significant scope (institution-wide) and participant size (3,400 students), contributing quantitative evidence to the employability skills articulation discussion. By surveying students six months post-course, the study captures whether articulation instruction can be recalled, an ability of particular relevance for career preparedness.
Tomasson Goodwin, J., Goh, J., Verkoeyen, S., and Lithgow, K. (2019). Can students be taught to articulate employability skills?. Education and Training, 61(4), 445-460. Retrieved from https://www.emeralDCom/insight/content/doi/10.1108/ET-08-2018-0186/full/html.
Journal Article

Capabilities and choices of vulnerable, long-term unemployed individualsexternal link icon

2018: Beck, V. SAGE Publications paywall icon
This article discusses the issue of choice as it applies to long-term unemployed and vulnerable individuals. It argues that the combination of poor employment opportunities, requirements, compulsions and sanctions has not merely reduced available choice for individuals with multiple barriers to re-/join the labour market but has also resulted in curtailed decision-making abilities when it comes to their pathways into employment. The outcomes can include protective resistance as a response to the extent of regulation, which may undermine engagement in job search and related activities. Despite attempts by benevolent staff in a charity to provide support and enhance capabilities that result in the overcoming of protective resistance, they operate within a broader institutional framework of choice as set by government policy. The end result is compulsion, not choice.
Beck, V. (2018). Capabilities and choices of vulnerable, long-term unemployed individuals. Work, Employment and Society, 32(1), 3-19 . Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017016686028.
Journal Article

Busting the myth of low-skilled workers: Destabilizing EU LLL policies through the life stories of Danes in low-skilled jobsexternal link icon

2018: Cort, P., Mariager-Anderson, K., and Thomsen, R. Taylor & Francis Group paywall icon
In the EU, ambitious objectives have been set for education and training since the adoption of the Lisbon Agenda in 2000. The policies aim among other things to empower the individual through participation in lifelong learning which is seen as both a right and a duty: 'People need to want and to be able to take their lives into their own hands - to become in short, active citizens' (CEC, 2000, p. 7). However, not all citizens are taking part in lifelong learning and consequently the EU and its member states have set up policies with a 'particular focus on active and preventative measures for the unemployed and inactive persons' (CEC, 2006, p.1). 'Inactive' persons comprise different groups which are marginalised in terms of participation in lifelong learning, among others 'low-skilled' who have a lower participation rate in education and training activities (Cedefop, 2013)., In this article, the aim is to destabilize the political discourse on 'low-skilled' through individual narratives of being in low-skilled jobs. Whereas the problem of being low-skilled from a political perspective is represented as psycho-social problems of the individual, the narratives point to the complexity of people in low-skilled jobs and the role of structure to 'low-skilledness'. The narratives open up issues of power and the historical arbitrary distinctions between skilled and unskilled in the Danish labour market. It opens up for how the educational structures produce 'low-skilled' people, especially in the transition from basic vocational education and training into an apprenticeship. The article points to the narrow focus of policies on the 'supply' side of lifelong learning and less on the 'demand' side of a 'needy' global labour market in which precarious jobs are no longer limited to low-skilled. The article draws on Bacchi's 'What's the Problem Represented to Be?' (1999, 2009) and narrative inquiry.
Cort, P., Mariager-Anderson, K., and Thomsen, R. (2018). Busting the myth of low-skilled workers: Destabilizing EU LLL policies through the life stories of Danes in low-skilled jobs. International Journal of Lifelong Education, 37(2), 199-215 . Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1080/02601370.2017.1404501 .
Journal Article

Building community bonds, bridges, and linkages to promote the career readiness of high school students in the United Statesexternal link icon

2018: Hernandez-Gantes, V., Keighobadi, S., and Fletcher, E. Taylor & Francis Group paywall icon
The career readiness of high school students has been a longstanding issue that has received renewed attention in recent years. To document an approach to promoting career readiness in the United States, we conducted an exploratory case study of a distinguished information technology career academy. Using the premises of capital building as a frame of reference, we found a community who viewed career readiness as a form of investment in human capital development. As such, a network of business partners collaborated with academy staff in providing school- and work-based learning opportunities for academy students. This approach was complemented by an emphasis on the development of social capital with social bonds, bridges, and linkages in place to sustain the network identity and development.
Hernandez-Gantes, V., Keighobadi, S., and Fletcher, E. (2018). Building community bonds, bridges, and linkages to promote the career readiness of high school students in the United States. Journal of Education and Work, 31(2), 190-203 . Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1080/13639080.2018.1434871 .
Journal Article

Britain's older employees in decline, 1990-2006: A panel analysis of payexternal link icon

2018: Smeaton, D. and White, M. SAGE Publications paywall icon
Older employees' wages and earnings declined over the period 1991-2006, when compared with younger employees. The overall fall in relative wages was about 18 per cent, and for relative earnings 21 per cent. The article argues that this change was predictable in view of the pressures of 'globalization' resulting in increased competition, and intensified technological and organizational change, for many employers from the 1990s onward. The relative fall in older female and male employees' pay had set in by the mid-1990s and it proceeded over the whole period to 2006.
Smeaton, D. and White, M. (2018). Britain's older employees in decline, 1990-2006: A panel analysis of pay. Work, Employment and Society, 32(1), 93-113 . Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017016687717.
Journal Article

Beyond employability skills: Developing professional purposeexternal link icon

2019: Bates, G., Rixon, A., Carbone, A., and Pilgrim, C. Deakin University paywall icon
Rapid transformation of the workplace and a highly competitive labour market has changed the nature of graduate employability. In addition to discipline related knowledge, students now need to be proactive and adaptable in identifying career opportunities. This paper presents a conceptual model that views employability as determined by an overarching professional purpose mindset. This mindset reflects a person’s commitment to developing a professional future aligned to personal values, professional aspirations and societal outlook. Four specific mindsets are encapsulated within professional purpose (curiosity, collaboration, action and growth) and relate to three domains of development (self and social awareness; navigating the world of work and networks). Two studies were conducted to explore the professional purpose model. Study one was a qualitative study in which 33 undergraduate students (19 female; 14 male) explored their career decision making. Focus group and interview data showed that each of the four positive mindsets operated in many students’ proactive career related behaviours. However, for other students, alternative mindsets negatively influenced their career related behaviour. In the second study, 42 academics (28 male; 14 female) identified unit learning outcomes in existing curricula related to the three domains of development. All domains were evident but outcomes for navigating the world of work received most emphasis. Implications of the findings for further development of the professional purpose model are discussed.
Bates, G., Rixon, A., Carbone, A., and Pilgrim, C. (2019). Beyond employability skills: Developing professional purpose. Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability, 10(1), . Retrieved from https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/794.

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