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Graduate Skills: the Employer Perspective Andy Russell HE Task Force Adviser

Graduate Skills: the Employer Perspective Andy Russell HE Task Force Adviser Education and Skills, CBI. Outline of discussion. Background on CBI HE Task Force What Business wants How can the different stakeholders respond Next steps. Outline of discussion. Background on CBI HE Task Force

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Graduate Skills: the Employer Perspective Andy Russell HE Task Force Adviser

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  1. Graduate Skills: the Employer Perspective Andy Russell HE Task Force Adviser Education and Skills, CBI

  2. Outline of discussion • Background on CBI HE Task Force • What Business wants • How can the different stakeholders respond • Next steps

  3. Outline of discussion • Background on CBI HE Task Force • What Business wants • How can the different stakeholders respond • Next steps

  4. What is the Task Force aiming to achieve? • Business has a growing need for higher level skills, it should therefore have a voice • Business must be clear on what it wants from HE • The Task Force will make clear: • What business wants now and in the future • What business will help to resource • How HE funding needs to develop to achieve this

  5. Why has the CBI set up a Task Force? • A thriving HE sector, which includes truly world class institutions that drive innovation and research • Key to the performance, productivity and sustainability of UK businesses • The future of HE is high on the political agenda: • The Government is developing its vision for the HE sector • Tuition fees – a decision could be made in 2009/10 • The Government is raising its expectations of what/how business should contribute

  6. Who is on the Task Force and what is the process? • The Task Force comprises of 20 members: • 16 CEOs/Chairmen • 3 university Vice Chancellors • Plus Richard Lambert • The Task Force was launched in September 2008 • The Task Force have met every other month • A final report will be launched in September 2009

  7. Key questions which the Task Force has focused on • 1) How do we ensure higher education is delivering what business wants? • The supply of graduates and post graduates • Training and development of the current workforce • The provision of research and innovation-related work • Management and leadership skills • 2) Is current funding fit for purpose and will it ensure that HE can deliver what business wants in the long term?

  8. Now is a critical time to act • Business as usual is not an option • Significant pressures: • Public finances • Overseas competition • Demographics

  9. Outline of discussion • Background on CBI HE Task Force • What Business wants • How can the different stakeholders respond • Next steps

  10. What is important for the future? • Continued economic success will depend on high value added sectors • Growing need for graduate level skills • Innovative new products and services • The UK economy is changing • Universities, business, students and government

  11. The business – university relationship • The business community relies on the HE sector, for: • Graduates and post graduates • Research and innovation • Training the workforce • Other roles of HE • Graduate demand v supply

  12. So what is the problem? • There are concerns among employers: • 1) Employability skills • 2) Quality and quantity of STEM • 3) Collaboration on research and innovation • 4) Capacity for workforce training • Overall – maintain our world class universities • A focus on quality

  13. 1) Employability skills • Ensure all graduates have employability skills • Definition: • Self management • Team working • Business/customer awareness • Problem Solving • Communication/literacy • Numeracy • Application of IT

  14. 1) Employability skills (cont’d)

  15. 1) Employability skills (cont’d) • Most are “satisfied” with most skills • But this is not good enough • Results from the CBI Education and Skills survey

  16. 1) Employability skills (cont’d)

  17. 1) Employability skills (cont’d) • CBI and Universities UK report on Employability • “Future Fit, preparing graduates for the world of work” • Lots of good practice by many universities • More can be done • Business has a role

  18. 2) Quality and quantity of STEM • Stem skills are vital to our commercial success • Government policy on “Industrial activism” • Report published in April, “New industry, new jobs” • Concern over number of firms who report STEM skills shortages • Relevance of content of degrees • Problems further down the supply chain • Decline over the past 30 years

  19. 3) Research and innovation • Successful innovation is fundamental to business competitiveness, and also key to sustaining and promoting economic prosperity, environmental sustainability and social welfare • “In today’s global economy, investment in science and innovation is not an intellectual luxury for a developed country, but an economic and social necessity, and a key part of any strategy for economic success” • Great progress in business-university co-operation for research and knowledge exchange over the past 5-10 years • But more can be done • Partners of choice

  20. 4) Workforce training • Provision of high quality training – this will increase • A significant market opportunity – £39 billion • Government targets – 70% of work force has left education • Some examples of good engagement. Two thirds of the largest firms use universities to deliver at least some of their leadership and management training • CBI/UUK report “Stepping higher” • But growth of this market needs a change of mindset

  21. 4) Workforce training (cont’) • A number of key issues: • Business aware of what is on offer • University flexibility • Funding of employer provision

  22. Outline of discussion • Background on CBI HE Task Force • What Business wants • How can the different stakeholders respond • Next steps

  23. How can we change? • Four areas where change is necessary to achieve the outcomes we need to deliver: • 1) Business needs to do more • 2) Funding - high quality teaching, particularly STEM, is expensive • 3) Students should be able to make more informed decisions • 4) Universities should be better able to respond effectively to business demand

  24. 1) Business needs to do more • Business already contributes significantly • But more can be done. Our report is therefore a call on business to do more • A set of recommendations • Specific commitments from Task Force members

  25. 2) Funding • Difficult decisions will have to be made regarding increasing the contribution students make • Reforms to offset expected reductions • Business income will increase for research if universities are more strategic with their pricing • Business income from workforce training - develop the capacity and capability

  26. 3) Students • Students themselves must do more to ensure they enter the labour market with vital employability skills • Students must be able to make more informed decisions • Encouraged to choose vital STEM subjects

  27. 4) Universities • Universities should be better able to respond effectively to business demand • Greater freedom to develop innovative provision • Drive up competition and quality • Effective mechanisms to work better together and understand each other’s needs • Research funding should be rebalanced to ensure more activity is user-focused

  28. Outline of discussion • Background on CBI HE Task Force • What Business wants • How can the different stakeholders respond • Next steps

  29. Next steps • Final stages of preparing our report • Task Force meets for the final time on the 7th July • Launch the report in September • In October, we will be holding an HE Summit • Take our conclusions to regional councils in November/December

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