Will graduate recruitment be about more than just grades?

-

AGCAS: Graduate recruitment be about more than just gradesEmployers are asking for more from university leavers looking for work than examples of what grades they achieved, according to one expert.

Martin Pennington, director of the Association of Graduate Careers Advisory Services, suggested that scrapping the degree classification system may make it easier for bosses to assess candidates in terms of their individual’s abilities and achievements when it comes to recruitment.

He said that employers have been asking for a change that allows them and managers to better compare applicants; especially given so many individuals are leaving universities across the UK with a 2:1, which poses a problem as far as hiring a suitable person.

The Higher Education Policy Institute last week proposed replacing the current method with transcripts of modules studied and a general overview of students’ talents.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Mr Pennington added that what a potential worker does during their university course should go beyond what they do in an exam hall, library or lecture theatre and take account of opportunities grasped by a jobseeker in their spare time or extra skills developed.



Latest news

Transgender staff excluded from single-sex toilets under new equality guidance

Transgender people must be excluded from single-sex toilets and changing rooms that correspond with their lived gender under updated...

Simon Coker: Closing the emotional gap – why AI in the workplace is as much a human challenge as a technological one

AI adoption is transforming how work gets done across every sector. But its deeper impact is less visible: it is reshaping how people feel about their work.

Employment tribunal delays stretch towards 2030 as lawyers warn system is nearing collapse

Employment tribunal hearings are being delayed for years as lawyers warn mounting backlogs are undermining workplace justice.

Keeping culture and purpose at the centre of a growing fintech

A fintech people leader explains how culture, wellbeing and purpose are being protected during rapid business growth.
- Advertisement -

Migrant worker with no right to work in UK wins discrimination case against employer

An employment tribunal has ruled that a migrant worker without the legal right to work in Britain can still pursue successful discrimination claims.

Government to replace some GP sick notes with return-to-work plans

Workers in four English regions will be directed towards personalised health and employment support as ministers test alternatives to GP-issued fit notes.

Must read

Marianna Fotaki: Why do women continue to experience inequalities at work?

In the last decade women have been entering professional and managerial positions in roughly the same proportions as men in the UK. However, they remain vastly underrepresented in top jobs while the gender pay gap is reported to have widened since 2006 from 92% to 95% globally.

Robert Leeming: Spot the problem with this photograph: Where are all the women?

The news from Paris this weekend, for once, was nothing but good. The vast majority of governments in the world reached a deal to work together to slow down climate change. The Paris pact aims to curb global warning to less than 2C (3.6F) by the end of the current century. President Obama labeled the deal as 'the best chance we have to save the one planet we have,' and labeled the deal, which was also signed by some of the world's biggest polluters such as India and China, as a 'turning point' towards a low-carbon future.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you