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Published byClaude Underwood Modified over 9 years ago
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A follow-up to the AGS Three years out ◦ First piloted in 2009 (2006 AGS respondents) ◦ Three years after the AGS ◦ AGS respondents only ◦ Same reference date Five years out ◦ Pilot in 2011 ◦ 2009 BGS pilot respondents contacted
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Collects three years of outcomes data ◦ Employment status and specifics ◦ Study status ◦ Tenure Plus ◦ OSI and GSS ◦ Course retrospective ◦ Workplace relevance ◦ Employability skills
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Conducted in June/July 34 institutions participated Total of 11,807 usable responses received ◦ matched back to AGS response Participating institutions received ◦ Summary reports ◦ Data files
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Conducted in October Pilot only BGS 2009 follow-up ◦ AGS 2006 follow-up Total of over 2,000 usable responses received ◦ matched back to AGS response Preliminary analysis only Will help to form 2012 instrument
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2008 (%)2011 (%) Full-time employment?83.292.8 Males83.993.8 Females82.892.2
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2008 (%)2011 (%) Full-time employment?83.592.5 Part-time employment11.14.2 Graduates not working5.83.0
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2008 (%)2011 (%) Managers5.911.1 Professionals72.273.8 Technicians and trades workers3.62.3 Community and personal service workers 4.83.7 Clerical and administrative workers10.78.1 Other occupations2.80.9 TOTAL 100
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2008 (%)2011 (%) Avail FT employment73.680.3 Full-time study16.59.9 In part-time or seeking PT work only 7.17.2 Unavailable2.82.6
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Median Salary20082011 Bachelors$47,000$66,000 Postgraduates$65,800$85,000
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Bachelors2007 ($,’000)2010 ($’000)% Growth Natural and physical sciences47.065.038.3 Information technology50.075.050.0 Engineering and related55.076.038.2 Architecture and building45.065.044.4 Agriculture and environment45.065.044.4 Health45.367.047.9 Education48.063.031.3 Management and commerce47.070.048.9 Society and culture46.266.042.9 Creative arts40.055.037.5 All fields47.066.040.4
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Fieldwork beginning mid July 38 institutions participating Working with ◦ Research Performance and Analysis Team from Innovation HDR graduates ◦ Office for Women from Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs Gender pay equality Participating institutions in December to receive ◦ Summary reports ◦ Data files
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Takes a closer look at graduate recruiters Running since 2005 Graduate recruitment practices and trends, including: ◦ Intake numbers and quality / satisfaction ◦ Recruitment techniques ◦ Preferred graduate attributes ◦ Retention ◦ International graduates
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Conducted in August each year Over 500 graduate employers responded in 2011 ◦ Variety of industries ◦ Employer sizes Online only Full report and industry reports distributed free
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Table 2: Why employers did not recruit mature age graduates, 2011 (%) Proportion of graduate intake constituted by mature age Why did not recruit mature age % No suitable candidate 55.6% No applications received 27.8% Too experienced for graduate position 7.4% Other 9.3%
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Effectiveness of social media sites Somewhat/Quite/ Very effective Quite/Very effective Facebook81.1%41.1% YouTube77.8%29.6% LinkedIn74.4%28.2% Twitter66.7%18.5%
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Selection Criteria200920102011 Interpersonal and communication skills (written and oral) 111 Passion/Knowledge of industry/Drive/Commitment/Attitude 222 Critical reasoning and analytical skills/Problem solving/Lateral thinking/Technical skills 333 Calibre of academic results444 Work experience665 Cultural alignment / Values fit756 Teamwork skills577 Emotional intelligence (incl. self- awareness, strength of character, confidence, motivation) 888 Leadership skills999 Activities (incl. intra and extra curricular)10
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Industry GroupMedian total cost Median per capita cost Government/Defence/Health$50,000$3,350 Construction/Mining/Engineering$30,000$1,500 Accounting/Finance related$12,500$1,800 Communication/Technology/Utilities$10,000$2,000 Legal/Professional services$10,000$2,000 Manufacturing$10,000$3,350
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