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Developing Graduate Employability for a Challenging Labour Market: the validation of the Graduate Capital Scale

Developing Graduate Employability for a Challenging Labour Market: the validation of the Graduate Capital Scale
Developing Graduate Employability for a Challenging Labour Market: the validation of the Graduate Capital Scale

Purpose: This article provides empirical validation of the Graduate Capital Model, adopted at a UK Russell Group University as a tool to analyse and support the career preparedness of both undergraduates and postgraduate students. An overview of employability capitals and how the development of these will potentially result in positive employment outcomes is explored. We describe the development of a psychometric tool “the Graduate Capital Scale” that seeks to operationalize these capitals. We then draw on data to establish the factor structure, reliability and validity of the tool. Design/methodology/approach: This paper introduces a new psychometric instrument, called the “Graduate Capital Scale”; this self-reflective tool aligns closely with the five capitals within the Graduate Capital Model (Tomlinson, 2017) and has been designed for higher education students to self-assess their confidence in transitioning to the graduate labour market. Findings: Based on a sample of 1,501 students across data collection waves, the findings from the psychometric scale show good factor reliability and validity for the constructs central to the overarching Graduate Capital Model. Within each of the component of the model, high factors loading emerged for a range of scale items, including subject-related skills, social networking, perceived job market fit and engagement with extra-curricula activities. Few gender differences emerged across the constructs. Research limitations/implications: The research was confined to a specific English university comprised of mainly academically high-achieving and higher socio-economic students. However, there is significant scope for the model and related scale tool to be applied to diverse student groups given its wholistic nature. Practical implications: The scale has considerable potential to be incorporated into careers practices and also embedded into course programmes as it aligns with a range of related learning outcomes. There is significant scope for this approach to complement a range of pedagogical and practical career interventions, including: self-reflective tools within tutorials; measures of learning gain for specific interventions such as careers coaching and mentoring; and as a personal reflective tool in careers guidance. Social implications: The approach developed through this employability tool has scope to be used for diverse graduate groups, including those with lower levels of career confidence, preparedness and insight and including those from lower socio-economic backgrounds. Originality/value: This paper has introduced and demonstrated the validity of a practical careers and employability development tool that has significant practical applicability for students, graduates and practitioners. Moreover, this scale supports a pre-existing conceptually driven model and has demonstrated a clear alignment between theory and practice in the area of graduate employability.

Capitals, Careers resources, Graduate capital model, Measurement instrument, Psychometric scale, Validation
1758-1184
1193-1209
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18
McCafferty, Hazel, Elaine
8efcc4b4-60c8-49ff-8ee4-3fde23fe8304
Port, Andrew
800907cb-0fc7-4e21-89e1-db2ddc44f909
Maguire, Nicholas
ebc88e0a-3c1e-4b3a-88ac-e1dad740011b
Zabelski, S.E
9a08bdda-6900-41cb-9712-ba6f6d2cc6be
Butnaru, Andreea
cec615a5-b437-4fb9-9ed5-206e5127f923
Charles, Megan
8b17fd45-5803-4b38-b10c-04e97b4a9264
Kirby, Sarah
9be57c1b-5ab7-4444-829e-d8e5dbe2370b
Tomlinson, Michael
9dd1cbf0-d3b0-421e-8ded-b3949ebcee18
McCafferty, Hazel, Elaine
8efcc4b4-60c8-49ff-8ee4-3fde23fe8304
Port, Andrew
800907cb-0fc7-4e21-89e1-db2ddc44f909
Maguire, Nicholas
ebc88e0a-3c1e-4b3a-88ac-e1dad740011b
Zabelski, S.E
9a08bdda-6900-41cb-9712-ba6f6d2cc6be
Butnaru, Andreea
cec615a5-b437-4fb9-9ed5-206e5127f923
Charles, Megan
8b17fd45-5803-4b38-b10c-04e97b4a9264
Kirby, Sarah
9be57c1b-5ab7-4444-829e-d8e5dbe2370b

Tomlinson, Michael, McCafferty, Hazel, Elaine, Port, Andrew, Maguire, Nicholas, Zabelski, S.E, Butnaru, Andreea, Charles, Megan and Kirby, Sarah (2022) Developing Graduate Employability for a Challenging Labour Market: the validation of the Graduate Capital Scale. Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, 14 (3), 1193-1209. (doi:10.1108/JARHE-04-2021-0151).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: This article provides empirical validation of the Graduate Capital Model, adopted at a UK Russell Group University as a tool to analyse and support the career preparedness of both undergraduates and postgraduate students. An overview of employability capitals and how the development of these will potentially result in positive employment outcomes is explored. We describe the development of a psychometric tool “the Graduate Capital Scale” that seeks to operationalize these capitals. We then draw on data to establish the factor structure, reliability and validity of the tool. Design/methodology/approach: This paper introduces a new psychometric instrument, called the “Graduate Capital Scale”; this self-reflective tool aligns closely with the five capitals within the Graduate Capital Model (Tomlinson, 2017) and has been designed for higher education students to self-assess their confidence in transitioning to the graduate labour market. Findings: Based on a sample of 1,501 students across data collection waves, the findings from the psychometric scale show good factor reliability and validity for the constructs central to the overarching Graduate Capital Model. Within each of the component of the model, high factors loading emerged for a range of scale items, including subject-related skills, social networking, perceived job market fit and engagement with extra-curricula activities. Few gender differences emerged across the constructs. Research limitations/implications: The research was confined to a specific English university comprised of mainly academically high-achieving and higher socio-economic students. However, there is significant scope for the model and related scale tool to be applied to diverse student groups given its wholistic nature. Practical implications: The scale has considerable potential to be incorporated into careers practices and also embedded into course programmes as it aligns with a range of related learning outcomes. There is significant scope for this approach to complement a range of pedagogical and practical career interventions, including: self-reflective tools within tutorials; measures of learning gain for specific interventions such as careers coaching and mentoring; and as a personal reflective tool in careers guidance. Social implications: The approach developed through this employability tool has scope to be used for diverse graduate groups, including those with lower levels of career confidence, preparedness and insight and including those from lower socio-economic backgrounds. Originality/value: This paper has introduced and demonstrated the validity of a practical careers and employability development tool that has significant practical applicability for students, graduates and practitioners. Moreover, this scale supports a pre-existing conceptually driven model and has demonstrated a clear alignment between theory and practice in the area of graduate employability.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 June 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 July 2021
Published date: 31 May 2022
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited.
Keywords: Capitals, Careers resources, Graduate capital model, Measurement instrument, Psychometric scale, Validation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 449731
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/449731
ISSN: 1758-1184
PURE UUID: 20e6f26c-6cd7-4744-8df1-5efb70347e95
ORCID for Michael Tomlinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1057-5188
ORCID for Hazel, Elaine McCafferty: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1606-5891
ORCID for Nicholas Maguire: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4295-8068
ORCID for Sarah Kirby: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1759-1356

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Date deposited: 15 Jun 2021 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:57

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Contributors

Author: Hazel, Elaine McCafferty ORCID iD
Author: Andrew Port
Author: S.E Zabelski
Author: Andreea Butnaru
Author: Megan Charles
Author: Sarah Kirby ORCID iD

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