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Sonst. PersonenSchomburg, Harald (Hrsg.); Teichler, Ulrich (Hrsg.)
TitelEmployability and mobility of Bachelor graduates in Europe.
Key results of the Bologna Process.
Gefälligkeitsübersetzung: Beschäftigungsfähigkeit und Mobilität von Bachelorabsolventen in Europa. Ergebnisse des Bologna-Prozesses.
QuelleRotterdam u.a.: Sense Publ. (2011), VI, 276 S.Verfügbarkeit 
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; Monographie
ISBN978-94-6091-568-0
SchlagwörterDeutschland; Europa; Frankreich; Italien; Mobilität; Niederlande; Norwegen; Österreich; Polen; Student; Berufliche Integration; Hochschule; Ungarn; Auswirkung; Berufserfolg; Hochschulpolitik; Absolvent; Beschäftigungsfähigkeit; Bologna-Prozess; Mobilität; Nachsozialistische Gesellschaft; Berufliche Integration; Berufserfolg; Beschäftigungsfähigkeit; Bologna-Prozess; Hochschulpolitik; Bachelor-Studiengang; Hochschule; Auswirkung; Absolvent; Student; Deutschland; Europa; Frankreich; Italien; Niederlande; Norwegen; Polen; Tschechische Republik; Ungarn; Österreich
Abstract"A decade after the Bologna Declaration has called for the establishment of a cycle system of study programmes and degrees all over Europe the changes actually having occurred in this reform process can be measured and assessed. To what extent did the bachelor students gained international experiences during or after their study program? What is the proportion of bachelor degree holders who are employed about one year after graduation? What are the Labor market experiences of those bachelor graduates who started to work? Was it difficult to gain relevant employment? What are the employment conditions for bachelor graduates in terms of income, position, working time, unlimited term contracts compared to traditional graduates? To what extent are bachelor graduates working in areas with dose relation to their field of study (horizontal match)? Is their level of education needed for their work tasks (vertical match)? These are the key questions which will be answered in this volume based an surveys of graduates from institutions of higher education recently undertaken in ten European countries (Austria, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Norway, Netherlands, Poland, and United Kingdom). The bachelor-master-structure actually implemented varies substantially between the countries and also the consequences of these reforms differ strikingly. In some countries, more students spend a period of study abroad than the goat set for the year 2020 in the Bologna Process; in other countries, not yet a quarter of the expected rate is achieved. Also the frequency of bachelor graduates differs by country who opt for further study, transfer to employment or are both employed and students. The comparative study also provides a wealth of information about the employment and work situation of bachelor graduates as compared to other graduates from institutions of higher education." (author's abstract). Contents: Harald Schomburg, Ulrich Teichler: Preface (1-2); Ulrich Teichler: Bologna - Motor or Stumbling Block for the Mobility and Employability of Graduates? (3-41); Helmut Guggenberger, Maria Keplinger and Martin Unger: Moving to the Bologna Structure: Facing Challenges in the Austrian Higher Education System (43-67); Radim Ryska, Martin Zelenka: Professional Success due to Scarcity? Bachelor Graduates in the Czech Republic (69-88); Harald Schomburg: Bachelor Graduates in Germany: Internationally Mobile, Smooth Transition and Professional Success (89-110); Jean-Francois Giret, Christine Guégnard and Claire Michot: The Vocationalisation of University Programmes in France: Its Consequences for Employability and Mobility (111-128); Laszlo Kiss, Zsuzsanna Veroszta: Bachelor Graduates in Hungary in the Transitional Period of Higher Education System (129-141); Andrea Cammelli, Gilberto Antonelli, Angelo di Francia, Giancarlo Gasperoni and Matteo Sgarzi: Mixed Outcomes of the Bologna Process in Italy (143-170); Jim Allen, Johan Coenen: Employability and Mobility of Bachelor Graduates in the Netherlands (171-183); Liv Anne Storen, Jannecke Wiers-Jenssen and Clara Ase Arnesen: Employability and Mobility of Norwegian Graduates Post Bologna (185-208); Gabriela Grotkowska: The Employability and Mobility of Bachelor Graduates in Poland (209-227); Brenda Little: The UK Bachelors Degree - A Sound Basis for Flexible Engagement with an Unregulated Labour Market? (229-251); Harald Schomburg: Employability and Mobility of Bachelor Graduates: The Findings of Graduate Surveys in Ten European Countries on the Assessment of the Impact of the Bologna Reform (253-273).
Erfasst vonGESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Mannheim
Update2012/1
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