11 topics among 7,591 employability research abstracts (1942–2024): a structural topic model and call for interdisciplinary perspectives
11 topics among 7,591 employability research abstracts (1942–2024): a structural topic model and call for interdisciplinary perspectives
Purpose: our goal was to empirically evaluate what topics can be discerned in employability scholarship. We sought to illustrate the diverse specialised expert knowledge across the full multidisciplinary breadth of employability literature, not only in the two predominant fields of graduate employability and career development.
Design/methodology/approach: structural topic modelling, an unsupervised statistical method that helps discern latent topics in a corpus of texts, analysed the abstracts of 7,591 journal articles on employability. Exploratory analysis showed that the 11-topic model offered the highest number of distinct and meaningful topics.
Findings: the 11 topics within the field of employability reflect research in a range of scholarly disciplines. We summarise the content of each topic and visualise the topic profiles of top journal articles, journals and authors.
Research limitations/implications: recent calls for greater integration between graduate employability and career development scholarships are warranted. But this study demonstrates that employability is studied in a muchbroader range of disciplines than just those two. Therefore, we argue that future scholarship should foster the advancement and application of research insights across the full breadth of disciplines, education and training systems and socio-cultural contexts. By doing so, the often-noted fragmentation and fuzziness in the employability literature will begin to be addressed.
Career development, Employability, Graduate employability, structural topic modeling (STM), Structural topic modelling
221-236
Healy, Michael
82a9579e-7e3e-4bad-aa07-5e3662060ce3
McIlveen, Peter
a74eaedb-c1f7-4d57-b029-cd0a480ee9b7
Brown, Jason L.
85113ac0-8f04-4156-913f-f38c7af872aa
Van der Heijden, Beatrice
e07e6ad4-fec8-4cd6-bbd9-0c349f060508
Donald, William E.
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
8 April 2025
Healy, Michael
82a9579e-7e3e-4bad-aa07-5e3662060ce3
McIlveen, Peter
a74eaedb-c1f7-4d57-b029-cd0a480ee9b7
Brown, Jason L.
85113ac0-8f04-4156-913f-f38c7af872aa
Van der Heijden, Beatrice
e07e6ad4-fec8-4cd6-bbd9-0c349f060508
Donald, William E.
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
Healy, Michael, McIlveen, Peter, Brown, Jason L., Van der Heijden, Beatrice and Donald, William E.
(2025)
11 topics among 7,591 employability research abstracts (1942–2024): a structural topic model and call for interdisciplinary perspectives.
Career Development International, 30 (2), .
(doi:10.1108/CDI-09-2024-0383).
Abstract
Purpose: our goal was to empirically evaluate what topics can be discerned in employability scholarship. We sought to illustrate the diverse specialised expert knowledge across the full multidisciplinary breadth of employability literature, not only in the two predominant fields of graduate employability and career development.
Design/methodology/approach: structural topic modelling, an unsupervised statistical method that helps discern latent topics in a corpus of texts, analysed the abstracts of 7,591 journal articles on employability. Exploratory analysis showed that the 11-topic model offered the highest number of distinct and meaningful topics.
Findings: the 11 topics within the field of employability reflect research in a range of scholarly disciplines. We summarise the content of each topic and visualise the topic profiles of top journal articles, journals and authors.
Research limitations/implications: recent calls for greater integration between graduate employability and career development scholarships are warranted. But this study demonstrates that employability is studied in a muchbroader range of disciplines than just those two. Therefore, we argue that future scholarship should foster the advancement and application of research insights across the full breadth of disciplines, education and training systems and socio-cultural contexts. By doing so, the often-noted fragmentation and fuzziness in the employability literature will begin to be addressed.
Text
Healy, McIlveen, Brown, Van der Heijden & Donald (2025) CDI
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 6 December 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 March 2025
Published date: 8 April 2025
Keywords:
Career development, Employability, Graduate employability, structural topic modeling (STM), Structural topic modelling
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 500563
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500563
ISSN: 1362-0436
PURE UUID: d0d66b3b-c5c7-4254-9608-f53753878ffb
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 06 May 2025 16:42
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:41
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Michael Healy
Author:
Peter McIlveen
Author:
Jason L. Brown
Author:
Beatrice Van der Heijden
Author:
William E. Donald
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics