Slides from a presentation given at the Innovations in Molecular Biology Education conference, Cambridge, December 2012. The presentation describes careers awareness and careers planning interventions in Biological Sciences at the University of Leicester, UK.
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Careers Fairs and Careers Information
1. Innovations in Molecular Bioscience Education 2012
Careers Fairs and Careers Information
Dr Chris Willmott
Dept of Biochemistry,
University of Leicester
cjrw2@le.ac.uk
University of
Leicester
2. Background: (Inter)national
• Employability high on the agenda of universities
• Global economic crisis tricky job market
• Unistat statement (since Aug 2010)
• Key Information Set (since Sept 2012)
3. Background: Disciplinary
• Biological Science
= excellent platform for diverse careers
• Unlike some courses (e.g. Medicine, Pharmacy, Law)
Bioscience is not “vocational”
- students may not know some careers exist
- they may need help in seeing beyond the
“known” pathways e.g. PhD, post-grad Medicine
4. National events
• Life Science Careers Conferences
www.societyofbiology.org/lscc
•Up to 3 events nationally
•Growing collection of
resources
e.g. talk slides
storify
Next Steps
5. Institution-specific events
• Careers Awareness
Careers After Biological Sciences (CABS)
• Careers Planning
Employability programme
University of
Leicester
6. Birth of CABS
• Careers After Biological Sciences @ Leicester
• Programme started 2007 with support of grant from
institution’s Fund for New Teaching Initiatives
• Two facets:
- series of talks about different careers
- online archive of material for those unable to
attend events
• The “spin” – all speakers are graduates from our own
courses (or key gatekeepers, e.g. postgraduate
admissions tutor, Head of Science at School of Edn)
7. Brief for speakers
• All speakers are asked to speak for about 25 minutes
and include three core pieces of information (in
whatever order they see fit):
- what their current job involves
- how they got there from here
(i.e. brief personal history)
- top tips for anyone considering a move into
the same field
8. Organisation of event
• Two basic patterns have been used
• A series of 4 or 5 “twilight” sessions of 1 hr
featuring 2 speakers each time (5 x 2 model)
• 2 Wednesday afternoon sessions with 5 speakers
each time (2 x 5 model)
• Advantages and disadvantages of both models, but
current preference is for 2 x 5
- students do not necessarily perceive the value
of broadening their horizons
- 5 talks in day offers “‘bait’ plus 4 other” model
- to Tea or not to Tea, that is the question?
11. Contacting speakers
• Traditional routes
- personal contacts (ex-tutees, contemporaries)
- recommendations from colleagues
• Newer route
- Facebook.com
- LinkedIn.com
• LinkedIn
- Business-orientated resource
- Categorisation issues, e.g. “Classmates”
• Facebook
- Search for known names
- Work through friends list
12. Facebook alumni group
• Better model – relational
• Two-way process, news fed to alumni
• >300 members
13. Central hub for resources
• Institutional VLE?
• Silo - no access for former students
- no access for broader community
• Free blogging services - Blogger.com
- Wordpress.com
• Previous experience with Wordpress
- Bioethicsbytes
- Journal of Left-handed Biochemist
16. Further resources: video (1)
• Video of talks?
- relatively easy to film, but...
- YouTube = max 15 mins for regular accounts
- Vimeo.com is good alternative
- basic account 500 MB per week
- editing costs can be significant
17. Further resources: video (2)
• Workplace interviews?
- short, pithy videos to complement
live events
- can fit on YouTube = higher impact
- requires budget
18. Further resources: audio
• Cheaper than video (production and editing)
• Podcast services (e.g. Libsyn.com)
- Subscription required
• free Slideshare account now includes capacity to link
audio to slides – “webinar” or “slidecast”
(subscription account can also add video)
19. Further resources: audio
• Cheaper than video (production and editing)
• Podcast services (e.g. Libsyn.com)
- Subscription required
• free Slideshare account now includes capacity to link
audio to slides – “webinar” or “slidecast”
(subscription account can also add video)
20. Raising awareness of resources
•Wordpress and Slideshare have high visibility with
search engines
• Can raise further awareness by promoting on Twitter
and Google+
21. Employability programme
• Emphasising careers need active planning from Year
1
“career management”
• Helping students identify their aspirations and work
towards achieve them
• HEA Departmental Teaching Development Grant
2012
• Project team:
School of Biological Sciences: Mark Goodwin, Jon
Scott, Chris Willmott, Maxine Bodicoat
Careers Service: Richard Wilcock, Andrew Jackson,
Stu Johnson
22. Employability programme
Year 1
• Intentions survey & Destinations analysis
• June: Intentions after Graduation event
(research → planning)
Year 2
• Ongoing support from School of Bio Sciences &
Careers Service (targeted events)
• June: Careers in Biosciences event
(planning → strategy)
Year 3
Applications
23. Intentions event (June of Yr 1)
• “Hanging weeks”
• First run 2012
• 172/256 attended (67%)
24. Intentions event (June of Yr 1)
• Employers/Admissions Tutors
- what’s necessary for successful application?
- what can you do over next year or so?
26. Intentions event (June of Yr 1)
• Student checklist
• Triplicates (Student, project team, personal tutor)
27. Careers event (June of Yr 2)
• Yr 1: research → planning
• Yr 2: planning → strategy
• Greater emphasis on practicalities of applying
- CV writing
- Applications and covering letters
- Assessment centres, what to expect
- Interviews
• Additional opportunity for networking with employers
and admissions tutors
29. Recommendations: Who
• Involvement of alumni in careers education
demonstrates the potential outcomes from present
course
• Academic colleagues may be able to recommend
potential speakers, but Web2.0 services such as
Facebook and LinkedIn are also valuable tools
• Alumni 5 to 10 years post graduation are ideal
- long enough out of college to be established
- not so old they graduated before students born
30. Recommendations: What (1)
Event
• An afternoon with 5-6 speakers is a good format
• Discussion ought to include at least one “obvious”
career (e.g. PhD, medicine, teaching)
• A range of other careers should be showcased,
including Careers from Science as well as Careers in
Science
• A tea break refreshes the mind, but offers opportunity
for escape
31. Recommendations: What (1)
Event
• An afternoon with 5-6 speakers is a good format
• Discussion ought to include at least one “obvious”
career (e.g. PhD, medicine, teaching)
• A range of other careers should be showcased,
including Careers from Science as well as Careers in
Science
• A tea break refreshes the mind, but offers opportunity
for escape
• At a minimum you should aim to take a photo or the
speakers, a copy of their slides and an audio
recording
32. Recommendations: What (2)
Post-event resources
• Blogging services provide an ideal platform for
aggregating resources:
- low entry-level computing skills
- in-built search facilities
- easy addition of metadata
• Content linked via the site can include:
- slides from the talk
- audio recording (possibly synched with slides)
- photo of speaker
- video of talk
- workplace video
- synopsis/reflections written by attendee
33. Acknowledgements
• Funding: Leicester Fund for New Teaching Initiatives
Higher Education Academy
• Alan Cann for Web2.0 wisdom
• Alumni who have been back to speak
34. Any Questions?
E-mail: cjrw2@le.ac.uk
Twitter: cjrw
Slideshare: cjrw2
Delicious: chriswillmott
Blogs: www.bioethicsbytes.wordpress.com
www.biosciencecareers.wordpress.com
www.lefthandedbiochemist.wordpress.com University of
Leicester