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Being a Graduate in the Twenty-first Century

Sub-brand to go here. Being a Graduate in the Twenty-first Century. Ronald Barnett, Institute of Education, London International Career Studies Symposium, University of Reading, 22-23 September, 2009. Centre for Higher Education Studies. Context – and Emma’s tale.

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Being a Graduate in the Twenty-first Century

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  1. Sub-brand to go here Being a Graduate in the Twenty-first Century Ronald Barnett, Institute of Education, London International Career Studies Symposium, University of Reading, 22-23 September, 2009 Centre for Higher Education Studies

  2. Context – and Emma’s tale A present context: the unemployed graduate ‘Last year, I created a new society for the University, for my course. That involved quite a lot of responsibility and taking control and I’ve never been in that, sort of, leadership position before. … the society stuff definitely helped my degree – if no other reason than just feeling more accessible to the lecturers and the tutors. ‘I’m [also] an artist .. I tend to do [large] landscapes in acylics. Q Do you see that as something quite separate or do you think it spills over in any way? ‘Yeah, I think it does in a way because I was thinking about how long it takes me to do the paintings, I think that’s, kind of, patience and the motivation to do it because there’s times when I think, I just want to give up.’

  3. Beginning questions So from these two starting points: • Just what is it to be a graduate in the C21? • Just what might we hope for from our students? • What might they want of themselves? • How might we understand ‘career’ now (eg amid (worldwide) recession) • What is it to learn in a university? What are the responsibilities of a university towards its students?

  4. Changing answers • Built successively around the themes of: • knowledge/ understanding (‘initiation’) • skills (‘employability’) • And now emerging? • wellbeing (‘therapy’) • citizenship (‘the global citizen’)

  5. The twenty-first century • Challenge • Change • Uncertainty • Complexity/ supercomplexity • Division – differences – of values, of resources, of perspectives • Global dimension

  6. Students as Global Citizens • A care/ concern for the world • A sense of interconnectedness • Not living in one’s own world • Helping to bring about a better world (cf ‘wisdom’) • A project of ‘engagement’ • Implies first-handedness; genuine (critical) thought & action • Impact on curricula • And on opportunities while a student

  7. Forms of learning • Sense that learning takes place in multiple sites • Even for the student • Is anything special about the student’s academic learning? • Lifewide learning – horizontal learning • Lifelong learning – learning through time (We’ll come back to these matters in a moment.)

  8. The ideas of ‘graduate attributes’ & ‘graduateness’ • (So) the world presents human being with considerable challenges – technical, social, communicative, personal • We look to graduates esp to be human beings who can live purposively in the face of these challenges • Even to be exemplary human beings • Such a world requires, in the first place, neither knowledge nor skills but dispositions and qualities of certain kinds

  9. Dispositions for a world of challenge • A will to learn • A will to engage • A preparedness to listen • A preparedness to explore • A willingness to hold oneself open to experiences • A determination to keep going forward

  10. Qualities for a world of challenge • Carefulness • Courage • Resilience • Self-discipline • Integrity • Restraint • Respect for others • Openness

  11. Dispositions and qualities compared • The dispositions are necessary; the qualities have a degree of optionality in them • Hence, just a few dispositions; but many qualities • The dispositions enable one to go forward • The qualities colour that forward movement; give it ‘character’

  12. The (higher) educational significance of the dispositions and qualities • The dispositions and qualities are concomitants of a genuine higher education • Curricula and pedagogies could nurture them • But often fall short • Students are denied curricula space, and pedagogical affirmation • But the dispositions and qualities (above) are logically implied in a ‘higher’ education.

  13. The idea of a career • The idea of ‘career’ implied steady progression in a particular (and challenging) field of work • And that there were clear boundaries between work and non-work • Both of those axioms have to be ditched • Against the considerations here, a ‘career’ becomes the continuous public working out of one’s possibilities in an uncertain world • It is the sedimentation of the dispositions and the widening and strengthening of the qualities • In particular, the will to learn (disposition) and courage and openness (qualities) are paramount • ‘Careers Units’ should perhaps be renamed ‘For-Life Units’

  14. Lifewide learning • Being a graduate (it follows) calls for both lifelong and for lifewide learning • If lifelong lng is lng through one’s lifespan, lifewide learning is learning across one’s life experiences • Implications for universities: the opening up of learning experiences outside the formal curriculum – both on and off campus. • It just may be that graduates gain as much – in the formation of the dispositions and qualities – from non-formal settings as from the formal curriculum. • So the idea of the ‘life-informed curriculum’ beckons • (We are unclear as to the relationships between the student’s manifold sites of learning; to what degree learning in one domain can assist learning in another domain. The answer may lie in Ds and Qs.)

  15. Conclusions • Becoming clearer about being a graduate in the C21 calls for a sense of the world in which graduates find themselves • & of the responsibilities graduates have in the world • - to themselves and to others and even to the world itself • In turn, the idea of ‘career’ diminishes • But there arises larger questions as to the relationship between graduates and the wider world • In turn, arise profound issues over curriculum & pedagogy • & in turn, arise qs as to the responsibilities of universities • And so arises the question of the university in the C21 • It is that, no less, that lies before us in these considerations. Institute of Education University of London 20 Bedford Way London WC1H 0AL Tel +44 (0)20 7612 6000 Fax +44 (0)20 7612 6126 Email info@ioe.ac.uk Web www.ioe.ac.uk

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