Humankapitalpotenziale der gestuften Hochschulabschlüsse : weiteres Studium, Übergang in das Beschäftigungssystem und beruflicher Erfolg von Bachelor- und Master-Absolventen in Deutschland
Titelübersetzung:Human capital potential of graded university degrees : further academic studies, transition to the employment system and occupational success of Bachelor and Master graduates in Germany
Quelle: Aktuelle hochpolitische Trends im Spiegel von Expertisen: Internationalisierung, Strukturwandel, Berufseinstieg für Absolventen. Bettina Alesi (Hrsg.), Nadine Merkator (Hrsg.). Kassel: Jenior (Werkstattberichte), 2010, S. 129-195
Inhalt: "In ihrem Beitrag 'Humankapitalpotenziale der gestuften Hochschulabschlüsse in Deutschland' gehen die VerfasserInnen der Frage nach, wie sich die quantitative Zunahme kurzer Studienabschlüsse als Folge des Bologna-Prozesses auf das akademische Humankapital in Deutschland auswirkt und untersuchen qualitative Veränderungen des Übergangs in den Arbeitsmarkt und der beruflichen Situation von Hochschulabsolventen." (Autorenreferat)
Inhalt: "Graduates from institutions of Higher Education do not only hope to get employed and be better paid. Study can also have an impact on employment and work in many respects: facilitating transition to employment, opening up opportunities for demanding, interesting and responsible professional assignments, increasing remuneration and job security, providing opportunities for continuing learning and leading the way to international mobility and visibly international assignments. The book provides a series of detailed analyses of graduate employment and work in comparative perspective. It draws from the survey of graduates from 11 European countries and Japan first published in H. Schomburg und U. Teichler 'Higher Education and Graduate Employment and Work' (2006). In this volume, scholars from twelve countries show how transition to employment, job assignments, employment assessments of the quality of employment and work vary by the graduates' socio-biographic and educational background. It also focuses on experiences during the course of study and competences acquired, international experience, regional background and regions of employment. It demonstrates more substantial differences of the relationships between study and subsequent employment between various countries than previous debates and analyses have suggested." (author's abstract)