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1、WHAT DOGRADUATES DO?2023Insights and analysis from the UKs largest higher education surveyProspects is now part of JiscWhat do graduates do?2023ForewordIt is always informative to read What do graduates do?and this year is no exception.Graduate Outcomes data for the 2019/20 graduating class shows wh
2、at AGCAS members and other experts had been expecting:employment rates were similar to normal years,and slightly better than the previous cohort.There currently appears to be real competition for talent,although the graduate labour market is not homogenous and there are significant regional and sect
3、or variations.Addressing regional inequalities is a key strategic area for AGCAS,and university careers services are the gatekeepers to regional labour market information and knowledge of local skills shortages.AGCAS member careers and employability experts are leading on essential coordinated work
4、in their areas to generate graduate-level roles.You can read more about this work from AGCAS President-elect Paul Gratrick.Sadly,we have seen no improvement in reducing inequality in outcomes for particular groups of students.Despite the commitment and innovation from both careers services and emplo
5、yers,this years Graduate Outcomes data shows that 59.3%of white graduates were in full-time employment 15 months after graduation compared with 51.3%of BAME graduates.These headline figures disguise a more complex picture.As the AGCAS Equality,Diversity and Inclusion Advisory Group note,employabilit
6、y outcome gaps will not be closed by focusing on ethnicity in isolation.The Graduate Outcomes survey gives us one way of measuring graduate success.However,it is ultimately the graduates themselves who should decide if their university experience has been valuable.Finding new ways to gather and resp
7、ond to definitions of graduate success and using it to inform the support careers services provide is an important focus for the careers and employability sector.With an increase in graduates starting businesses,we are seeing more careers services supporting enterprise and entrepreneurship.The profe
8、ssionals that work in university careers services are responsive and adaptable,using their knowledge and skills to help students and graduates make informed choices in this post pandemic world.I know that I will be returning to this edition of What Do Graduates Do?repeatedly throughout the year,I ho
9、pe that it provides you with information that will inform your work with students and graduates.Elaine BoyesExecutive director,AGCASWhat do graduates do?2023What do graduates do?is an essential resource for anyone wanting to understand the graduate labour market and outcomes for UK first-degree grad
10、uates 15 months after finishing university.It takes an in-depth look at HESAs Graduate Outcomes survey,which provides a comprehensive picture of graduate activity post-graduation.We open with an overview of the graduate labour market by Jiscs senior consultant for labour market intelligence,Charlie
11、Ball,who discusses the destinations of those graduating into a difficult environment with significant COVID-19 restrictions in place.This is followed by a breakdown of graduate destinations by degree subject area,with details of the industries and occupations these graduates entered.The essential co
12、ntext for the data is delivered through expert insights from AGCAS-member careers and employability professionals.Graduate destination surveys are a longstanding method of assessing employment trends.The Graduate Outcomes survey takes place 15 months after graduation,and the most recent edition rece
13、ived 191,980 responses from UK-domiciled first-degree graduates who completed their studies in 2019/20.Data from the Graduate Outcomes survey cannot be compared with data from its predecessor,Destinations of Leavers from Higher Education(DHLE),due to the change in methodology.This edition of What do
14、 graduates do?is also the first to use the Higher Education Classification of Subjects(HECoS),and therefore the subject data cannot be compared to previous editions,which used the Joint Academic Coding System(JACS)to classify academic subjects.Contributors from Prospects(part of Jisc)and AGCAS have
15、collaborated to create the best source of information about graduates and their employment outcomes,and the information will be valuable for the next generation of graduates who wish to understand the nature of the labour market they are preparing to enter,as well as anyone who supports them in achi
16、eving their goals.Laura Greaves,editor Partners:p.1 Graduate labour market overview p.3 First-degree graduates p.4 Regional overviewExpert insightsp.7 Untapped potential:graduate voice and the value of HEp.9 Tackling inequalities in graduate employment outcomesp.10 Graduate Outcomes and the future w
17、orld of workp.12 How to respond to graduate migration patternsp.13 Graduate recruitment through the pandemicBusiness and administrative studiesp.15 Overviewp.16 Economicsp.17 Finance and accountancyp.18 Business and management studiesp.19 Hospitality,leisure,tourism and transportp.20 Marketing Creat
18、ive artsp.22 Overviewp.24 Artp.25 Designp.26 Media studiesp.27 Performing artsp.28 Cinematics and photography Technology,engineering and mathsp.30 Overviewp.31 Computer sciencep.32 Mathematicsp.33 Architecture and building p.34 Civil engineeringp.35 Electrical and electronic engineeringp.36 Mechanic
19、al engineeringp.37 Chemical engineeringHumanitiesp.39 Overviewp.40 English literaturep.41 Englishp.42 Historyp.43 Languagesp.44 Philosophy Sciencep.46 Overviewp.47 Biologyp.48 Chemistryp.49 Physical and geographical sciencesp.50 Physicsp.51 Sports science Social sciencesp.53 Overviewp.54 Geographyp.
20、55 Lawp.56 Psychologyp.57 Sociologyp.58 Politicsp.59 Education Appendixp.61 Data explainedp.64 ReferencesIntroductionWhats insideWHAT DO GRADUATES DO?2023 is produced by Prospects(part of Jisc)and AGCAS.Jisc www.jisc.ac.uk Charlie Ball,Senior consultant:labour market intelligence/Laura Greaves,Infor
21、mation analyst/Micha-Shannon Smith,Assistant information analyst/Dan Mason,Editorial manager.AGCAS www.agcas.org.uk Gemma Green,Head of external relations.Jisc/AGCAS 2022.Material from this publication may be reproduced for non-commercial purposes provided What do graduates do?is acknowledged.If mat
22、erial is required for commercial use,please contact Prospects in the first instance.Published by Jisc,4 Portwall Lane,Bristol BS1 6NB 0161 277 5200 contactluminate.prospects.ac.uk Company registration no.09316933(England).Prospects are the experts in graduate careers.We help to guide students and gr
23、aduates to a bright future with unrivalled information,advice and opportunities.We provide a market-leading portfolio of graduate career and postgraduate study recruitment options.We use our unique insight into what graduates do,where they go and what their motivations are to guide and inspire caree
24、r choices throughout the student journey.Prospects is part of Jisc,the UKs technology solutions organisation for higher and further education.Jisc is funded by the UK higher and further education and research funding bodies and member institutions.Our established position in the sector,along with an
25、 unparalleled knowledge of graduate careers helps us to manage a range of key initiatives within higher education.1What do graduates do?2023Jiscs senior consultant for labour market intelligence,Charlie Ball,puts the employment outcomes of 2019/20 graduates into the uniquely challenging context of p
26、andemic lockdowns and labour shortagesThis edition of What do graduates do?is a particularly significant one in our goal of understanding the nature and shape of the UK graduate labour market.It covers graduates who left university in the 2019/20 academic year,and who were surveyed using HESAs Gradu
27、ate Outcomes survey in 2021,so 15 months after graduation.These dates are highly important.Graduates in this edition left university during the COVID-19 pandemic,and during the summer significant restrictions were in place throughout the country and with specific extra restrictions in certain parts
28、of the country,such as Scotland and parts of the North and Midlands of England.1At this point,the labour market was very difficult.On 8 July 2020,the government released its Plan for Jobs.2 Crucial measures included:a one-off payment of 1,000 to UK employers for every furloughed employee earning abo
29、ve 520 per month who remained continuously employed through to the end of January 2021 a new Kickstart Scheme,to create six-month work placements aimed at those aged 16-24 on Universal Credit and deemed to be at risk of long-term unemployment an additional 32million funding over the next two years f
30、or the National Careers Service 2,000 to employers in England for each new apprentice they hired aged under age 25,and a 1,500 payment for each new apprentice they hired aged 25 and over.This demonstrates the severity of the issues in the labour market.By the end of June 2020,nearly half a million p
31、eople had lost their jobs,and the number of people in the workforce continued to fall throughout 2020.3 Job vacancies,meanwhile,reached bottom in June 2020 with vacancies running at around 39%of pre-pandemic levels.4 However,there were already signs that the graduate labour market might escape the w
32、orst of the effects.5By the time that these graduates were surveyed,it had become clear that the labour market in general,and the graduate labour market in particular,had outperformed not merely the worst predictions,but also most of the more optimistic ones.The large majority of restrictions had be
33、en removed some time previously,job vacancy levels returned to pre-pandemic levels in May 2021,and had been comfortably outperforming that level ever since.By December 2021,vacancies were 20 to 30%above pre-pandemic levels,all graduate recruitment sectors(with the exception of energy and law)had vac
34、ancies above pre-pandemic levels and had had them for some time,and the narrative switched from job losses to occupational shortages and recruitment difficulties.6This is the unique context into which this cohort graduated.Having entered some of the most difficult labour market conditions for new gr
35、aduates in living memory,the market improved rapidly and vigorously and so outcomes for this cohort after 15 months were slightly better than their peers from the previous year,who had graduated into a relatively normal labour market but who were surveyed during severe pandemic restrictions.As many
36、as 80%of the cohort were employed either full time(with or without further study),or part time,with a small number working unpaid or on a voluntary basis.One fifth were in further study,either solely or alongside work,and Masters qualifications remained the most common qualification for this group.J
37、ust 5.8%were unemployed at the time of the survey,but 28%had a job or,less commonly,a course of study,lined up to go to and so only 4.2%of the cohort were unemployed and did not have something to go to within a month.This is not dissimilar to the figures we might expect for a normal year and demonst
38、rates the employability,resilience and adaptability of UK graduates,and how rapidly the graduate labour market had rebounded from COVID.Of those who were working,67%were in permanent,full-time roles and another 15%were on fixed term contracts-note that the latter is very common among professionals o
39、n qualifying years,such as junior doctors,and should not be seen as necessarily a sign of insecure employment.Self-employment had been hit particularly hard by the pandemic,but around 8%of the employed cohort were either self-employed or actively working towards self-employment,and this will be moni
40、tored over time to see if COVID has had any long-term effect on the self-employed graduate community.Graduate labour market overviewEven in a pandemic the large majority of new graduates got good jobs.There is no reason to believe that the coming period of economic difficulty will disrupt that.2What
41、 do graduates do?2023Location of employment and hybrid workingArguably one of the most significant long-term effects of the COVID pandemic has been the rapid adoption of hybrid working.By Spring 2022,around 38%of working adults reported working from home for some time during the previous week7,but i
42、t was also clear from the data that hybrid working was much more common among high earners,the more qualified and particularly in sectors such as IT and business services.In short,hybrid working is much more common among graduates than non-graduates and it has become the norm for many graduate emplo
43、yees.At present,this tendency is not very clear in the data for new qualifiers.The data on location of employment is not very dissimilar to pre-pandemic figures.London is the most important location but the large majority of graduates do not,and never will,work in the capital-and most of those who d
44、o already hail from the city and its neighbouring regions.But in future,the Graduate Outcomes survey aims to capture not merely where work is based but also where workers tend to work from,and we will be able to examine this topic in much more detail.Types of workThis cohort of graduates were more l
45、ikely to be in professional-level employment than their peers a year previously.As many as 74%of working graduates were in professional-level employment after 15 months.The occupations that saw the greatest increases in employment between the two years were:other nursing professionals,a group includ
46、ing non-hospital nurses,up 860 marketing professions,up 720 graphic designers,an occupation that had been hit hard by the pandemic but recovered very rapidly,up 445 laboratory technicians,an occupation with particular recruitment and retention issues,up 440 teaching professionals not elsewhere class
47、ified,(a group including peripatetic teachers of subjects like languages,drama or music),up 430.All of these roles are considered to be at professional level.The largest fallers were retail assistants(down 535),basic customer service workers(down 455),care home workers,an occupation that saw a large
48、 rise during the pandemic(down 410),bank clerks,down 280,and waiters and waitresses,down 240.None of these roles are considered to be professional-level jobs.Looking forward,the economic signals are not good.Inflation has increased rapidly and to levels not seen for many years,and the expectation is
49、 that it will rise significantly further.Energy bills have skyrocketed.The country looks set to enter a very difficult period,but the labour market,particularly for graduates,remains very strong at the time of writing,and it looks as if we head into these much choppier waters with a labour shortage.
50、This is quite unusual in itself and makes prediction even more difficult than usual.But,even in a pandemic that locked down the UK economy,the large majority of new graduates got good jobs.There is no reason to believe that the coming period of economic difficulty,no matter how severe,will disrupt t
51、hat.The last few years have been tremendously challenging for graduates and those who support them,but the quality,resilience and adaptability of our graduates has helped them meet challenges in the past,and we can help them meet those that are on their way.Graduate labour market overview5 data poin
52、ts you may have missed Four fifths(79%)of first-degree graduates with disabilities found full or part-time employment 15 months after graduation with the majority(71%)working in professional-level jobs.In addition,63%of those in employment said they are utilising the skills they learnt during their
53、studies.95%of 2019/20 first degree graduates who had done an apprenticeship were in professional-level employment 15 months after graduation,with 42%working as engineering and IT professionals.UK graduates from low participation neighbourhoods were just as likely to be in full-time employment 15 mon
54、ths after graduation as those from high participation neighbourhoods.However,graduates from neighbourhoods with the highest level of participation were slightly more likely to find professional-level jobs(77%)than those from neighbourhoods within the first(70%),second(71%),third(72%)and fourth(73%)q
55、uintiles.Those who graduated with First Class honours(71%)were slightly more likely to be in full-time employment 15 months after graduation than those with a 2:1(67%),2:2(67%)or Third(69%).White graduates(70%)were more likely to be in employment 15 months after graduation than their BAME counterpar
56、ts(65%).White graduates(74%)were also more likely than BAME graduates(72%)to be in professional-level employment.Micha-Shannon Smith3What do graduates do?2023First-degree graduatesOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYArts,design and media professionals 5.6
57、%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 6.6%Business,HR and finance professionals 11.1%Science professionals 2.7%Education professionals 7.7%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 2.5%Engineering and building professionals 6.1%Childcare,health and education occupations 5.0%Health prof
58、essionals 16.5%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 7.7%Information technology professionals 6.3%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 9.0%Legal,social and welfare professionals 5.4%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 1.7%Managers 3.5%Other occupations 2.6%Working full time i
59、n the UKOtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK57.3%5.7%5.9%9.2%10.6%11.4%Masters(e.g.MA,MSc)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherProfessional qualificationPostgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)53.5%9.5%10.9%1
60、2.1%13.9%FEMALE 79,050/MALE 53,740/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:132,795TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTTOP 10 PROFESSIONAL JOBS HELD BY FIRST-DEGREE GRADUATESSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 112,165/MALE 79,645 TOTAL RESPONSES 191,810FIRST-DEGREE GRADUATESOther nursingprofessionalsProgrammers and softwar
61、e development professionalsMarketing associate professionalsGeneralist medical practitionersPrimary education teaching professionals12345Secondary education teaching professionalsChartered and certified accountantsFinance and investment analysts and advisersHuman resources and industrial relations o
62、fficersManagement consultants and business analysts678910TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 35,7104What do graduates do?2023Regional overviewThe data on this page gives an indication of where in the UK graduates from 2019/20 were employed,which regions saw the highest levels of self-employment
63、,and where jobs in small and medium-sized enterprises of fewer than 250 employees were most prevalentNorth East 2019/20 graduates working here:3.1%.Share of self-employed graduates:1.8%.Graduates working in SMEs:20.1%.75.6%of employed graduates worked full time.Yorkshire and The Humber 2019/20 gradu
64、ates working here:7.3%.Share of self-employed graduates:6.5%.Graduates working in SMEs:24.5%.19%of graduates working in this region stayed there after graduation to work.Wales 2019/20 graduates working here:4.2%.Share of self-employed graduates:3.1%.Graduates working in SMEs:19.7%.11.8%of graduates
65、working here had worked three or more jobs since graduating.South West 2019/20 graduates working here:7.6%.Share of self-employed graduates:7.2%.Graduates working in SMEs:25.5%.11.9%of graduates working here had worked three or more jobs since graduating.West Midlands 2019/20 graduates working here:
66、7.6%.Share of self-employed graduates:7.5%.Graduates working in SMEs:23.3%.5.9%of graduates working in this region were on a zero-hours contract.North West 2019/20 graduates working here:10.5%.Share of self-employed graduates:10.4%.Graduates working in SMEs:24.7%.16.5%of male education graduates wor
67、ked in this region.London 2019/20 graduates working here:23.1%.Share of self-employed graduates:28.4%.Graduates working in SMEs:25.4%.48%of graduates working in London were not originally from the area.South East 2019/20 graduates working here:12.2%.Share of self-employed graduates:11.7%.Graduates w
68、orking in SMEs:27.3%.The most popular location of employment for sports and exercise science graduates(15.4%),followed by London.East Midlands 2019/20 graduates working here:5.8%.Share of self-employed graduates:6%.Graduates working in SMEs:26.9%.8.4%of creative arts graduates from this region were
69、developing a creative,artistic or professional portfolio.East of England 2019/20 graduates working here:7.2%.Share of self-employed graduates:7.3%.Graduates working in SMEs:27.1%.Had the highest percentage of graduates returning there after graduation to work(41%).5What do graduates do?2023Regional
70、overviewThe data on this page gives an indication of where in the UK graduates from 2019/20 were employed,which regions saw the highest levels of self-employment,and where jobs in small and medium-sized enterprises of fewer than 250 employees were most prevalentGuernsey,Jersey and the Isle of Man 20
71、19/20 graduates working here:0.2%.Share of self-employed graduates:0.4%.Graduates working in SMEs:7.5%.11.1%of graduates from this region were in further study 15 months after graduation.Northern Ireland 2019/20 graduates working here:3.2%.Share of self-employed graduates:2.3%.Graduates working in S
72、MEs:24.3%.The majority of graduates working in this region were originally domiciled there(96%).Scotland 2019/20 graduates working here:8.1%.Share of self-employed graduates:7.4%.Graduates working in SMEs:18.9%.74.9%of graduates working here were in a professional-level job.EXPERTINSIGHTS7What do gr
73、aduates do?2023EXPERT INSIGHTSThe measures by which the relative success(or failure)of our universities are judged is the subject of increasing political scrutiny.Many across the sector lament the binary interpretations of relative success as crude measures of the value of higher education.Measures
74、such as graduate salary and the labelling of occupations as professional-level pay little attention to the individual that sits behind those metrics,nor the context or their motivations for university study,which are often very personal and subjective.Furthermore,defining the value of a degree by it
75、s relative monetary return to the Treasury pays little regard to a system in which jobs that require a degree can sometimes lead to careers with relatively modest remuneration(and this is before we even contemplate the differentiated graduate labour market and regional variations of salary).To defin
76、e value by salary fundamentally detracts from the social and cultural value of such pursuits.With this in mind,it has never been more important to develop a deeper understanding of graduates individual perceptions.Understanding the graduate voice is critical to inform the development of the support
77、services universities provide,such as bespoke and differentiated careers and employability education,as well as providing a contextual narrative to influence and stimulate agency within institutions,and to counter the implicit assumptions of value enforced by our metricised system.To date,although s
78、ome league table providers have started to experiment with the use of graduate voice data in their metrics,the dataset is still relatively underutilised and there are no immediate plans for it to be drawn upon in the regulation of student outcomes(in England).1 Nonetheless,analysis of the 2019/20 da
79、ta still provides a useful insight into the graduate perspective,which can either challenge or re-enforce our perceptions of the graduate labour market.The Graduate Outcomes survey asks graduates to reflect on their activity to date and covers three key aspects:The extent to which graduates feel the
80、y are utilising what they learnt during their studies in their current activity.The extent to which graduates perceive their current activity as meaningful.The extent to which graduates feel their current activity fits with their future plans(on track).Untapped potential:graduate voice and the value
81、 of HEMark Stow,director of business engagement,careers&employability at Leeds Beckett University,and Gemma Green,head of external relations at AGCAS,emphasise the importance of listening to graduate voices when determining the value of higher education8What do graduates do?2023EXPERT INSIGHTSPositi
82、ve representationAcross the three datasets,we see a relatively positive representation of the graduate voice and the perceived value that they place on their university education.61%agree or strongly agree that they are utilising what they learnt during their studies,while 82%agree or strongly agree
83、 that the activity they are engaged in is meaningful,and 72%agree or strongly agree that their current activity is on track.As such,the data demonstrates that graduates acknowledge the impact of their university education upon their current activity,that this activity is of subjective value to them,
84、and that their activity is presenting positive prospects to help them achieve their future plans.These insights alone move us beyond the binary definition of value.Subject variationAcross all three of the metrics there is,inevitably,subject variation in the responses.Perhaps unsurprisingly,there is
85、also a clear split across those disciplines which arguably have a more vocationally-focused pathway.This trend is more overt in graduates utilising what they learnt during their studies(ranging from 50%in Politics up to 76%in Education)and with the on track data(ranging from 62%in Art up to 83%in Ci
86、vil Engineering).Interestingly,the distinction between vocationally-focused disciplines and other disciplines is less evident in graduates perceptions of how meaningful their activity is.This suggests a more consistent sense of value in the activities that graduates are undertaking across all discip
87、lines(the lowest positive response was in Cinematics and Photography at 73%).Variation by student characteristicsExploring the data by student characteristics(BAME,polar quintiles,and disability)reflects a similar picture to what we often see in institutional Access and Participation Plans(APPs),wit
88、h a negative percentage gap across all the student characteristic groups.The largest gaps are for Black and minority ethnic graduates perceptions of their current activity being on track when compared to their white peers(-3.6%)and for graduates who have declared a disability when compared to those
89、without a disability(-3.2%).Interestingly,the negative trends are reversed or reduced when we explore polar quintiles,with a positive gap(+0.7%)identified in utilising what they learnt during their studies for graduates from low participation neighbourhoods compared to their peers from areas with a
90、higher propensity to attend HE.We also see a less pronounced gap(-0.8%),when we consider the extent to which graduates perceive their current activity as being meaningful.This perhaps reflects the difference between expectation and reality,and the value some students from low participation neighbour
91、hoods place on their activities and opportunities for progression within the context of their background.Future commitment The context which the graduate voice data can add to the traditional analysis of graduate destinations has the potential to be incredibly powerful.A valued ex-colleague once ref
92、lected that our current system of capturing the value of universities increasingly means that we are managed by proxies for which there is no consensus,so if you want to know how our graduates are really doing why not just ask?2 The graduate voice dataset goes some way to enabling us to do so,and it
93、 is perhaps up to the sector to commit to using it more to effectively challenge and influence the ongoing political and divisive narrative of value.Untapped potential:graduate voice and the value of HEUnderstanding the graduate voice is critical to inform the development of the support services uni
94、versities provide,such as bespoke and differentiated careers and employability education.9What do graduates do?2023EXPERT INSIGHTSWe know that there is an employment outcomes gap between UK-domiciled white students and students from different ethnic backgrounds-it has been a talking point in recent
95、years and the gap was highlighted in the 2021 edition of What do graduates do?The situation has to have improved since then,right?Sadly,the most recent Graduate Outcomes data indicates that things are not getting better.Ethnicity mattersBAME(Black,Asian and minority ethnic)is divisive as a catch-all
96、 term.Frequently used to group all ethnic minorities together,it disguises huge differences in outcomes between them.For example,if we look at the 2019/20 Graduate Outcomes data we can see that 59.3%of white graduates were in full-time employment 15 months after graduation compared with 51.3%of BAME
97、 graduates.This gap of eight percentage points is problematic in itself,but if we look even more closely at the data we can see,for example,that the gap is even wider for Asian or Asian British-Pakistani graduates with a difference in outcomes of 11.2 percentage points.By grouping all non-white grad
98、uates into a box we are missing key nuances in the data that can,and should,be used to further inform decision-making and policymaking addressing graduate outcome inequalities.Pandemic impact Unsurprisingly,COVID-19 has impacted graduate outcomes across the board with a reduction in full-time employ
99、ment outcomes across all ethnic groups.For those students who graduated in 2018/19 this was down from 60.2%to 55.7%.Although the data has improved for the graduating class of 2019/20(with an increase to 57.4%)we are still not back to pre-pandemic levels and some groups have been more heavily impacte
100、d than others.Chinese graduates are now the group with the highest unemployment rate(11.6%).The percentage of Chinese graduates in full-time employment has reduced by 5.9 percentage points between 2017/18 and 2019/20 compared with the average reduction across all ethnicities of 2.8 percentage points
101、.Intersectionality Everyone has their own unique experiences of discrimination and oppression.We must recognise all aspects that can be used to marginalise people,such as gender,race,class,sexual orientation,physical ability etc.Acknowledging the importance of intersectionality means that tackling t
102、he graduate outcomes gap for ethnic minority students alone is not an equitable approach.All forms of inequality surfaced in the data must be analysed and addressed simultaneously to prevent the rights,interests and voices of minorities from being overlooked.For example,2019/20 data demonstrates tha
103、t 75.2%of employed white male graduates are in professional-level jobs compared to 61.3%of female Asian-Bangladeshi graduates.This gap of 14 percentage points will not be closed by addressing ethnicity in isolation.Data should be viewed holistically,acknowledging and addressing the inequality of opp
104、ortunity from different perspectives.What next?Universities and employers have taken steps to address inequalities in graduate outcomes over the past few years.Schemes such as the 10,000 Black Interns programme and various targeted diversity internships are all positive steps towards tackling the gr
105、aduate outcomes gap.Due to the lag between graduation and Graduate Outcomes data collection we wont know the full impact of these interventions for quite some time.While there has been a flurry of remedial action in this area in the last few years,there is still a lot more to be done,particularly fr
106、om moving from a piecemeal approach to one that is strategically embedded in,part of and informs organisational strategy and policy;fully resourced,monitored,and championed by employers,universities,and employability services.There needs to be more collaboration,sharing of data and impact,and applic
107、ation of what works across organisations.Rachel Beauchamp is postgraduate company projects manager at Lancaster University Management School.Anna Levett is head of Careers and Employment at the University of Hertfordshire.Obieze Oputa is careers consultant at The Careers Group.Tackling inequalities
108、in graduate employment outcomesRachel Beauchamp,Anna Levett and Obieze Oputa-members of the AGCAS Equality and Diversity Advisory Group-explain why inequalities of opportunity need to be addressed holistically EMPLOYMENT OUTCOME GAPS WONT BE CLOSED BY FOCUSING ON ETHNICITY IN ISOLATION.White male gr
109、aduates in professional-level jobs61.2%75.2%Female Asian-Bangladeshi graduates in professional-level jobsBy grouping all non-white graduates into a box we are missing key nuances in the data that can,and should,be used to further inform decision-making and policymaking.10What do graduates do?2023EXP
110、ERT INSIGHTSThe Graduate Outcomes survey provides insight into the activities of graduates once they gain their qualification and make their next step.By its nature,it is a glimpse into the,albeit recent,past.Even without the turbulence of the past two years,the world of work was changing,with digit
111、isation,globalisation and social factors already changing the ways we work and think about work.How,if at all,can the graduate outcomes of the past help us support the graduates of the future?The big pictureThere are some differences in the employment outcomes of 2018/19 graduates,who were surveyed
112、during the early pandemic,and 2019/20 graduates.The proportion of 2019/20 graduates in full-time employment has increased by five percentage points in comparison to 2018/19(57.3%,compared to 52.3%).There is little difference in the part-time employment rates for 2019/20(11.4%)graduates and the 2018/
113、19 cohort(12.4%).Across all subject areas,2019/20 graduates in employment were most likely to be employed in high-skilled roles(74%),with over half employed in professional occupations(49%)and fewer in associate professional occupations(22%)and employed as managers,directors and senior officials(3%)
114、.However,graduates are also employed in jobs that are not classed as high skilled,including administrative and secretarial jobs(7%),caring,leisure,and other service occupations(6%)and sales and customer service occupations(5%).Research by the Skills and Employability Board in 2022 predicts that in t
115、he next five to ten years,there will increasing demand in England for managers,directors,and senior officials and for workers in professional occupations,associate professional and technical occupations,and caring,leisure,and other service occupations.1 This is pretty good news for graduates and edu
116、cation providers,and we might reasonably predict that graduate employment in high-skilled roles will increase accordingly.Being their own bossOne advantage of the survey is that it gives us some understanding of other types of work graduates undertake that isnt on behalf of an employer.Nestas For Lo
117、ve or Money?report(2020)while creative arts graduates are more likely than others to be in part-time employment,their work is often related to their degree than other disciplines.1 While they make up only 17%of the graduate population,they represent 46%of graduates working in the creative industries
118、.This demonstrates firstly,why it is so important that definitions of a good graduate job capture those that the graduate finds meaningful,relates to their chosen field or uses skills that theyve learned during their degree;and secondly,that over half of the graduates working in these industries are
119、 not from a creative arts background.At the time of survey,3%graduates were self-employed/freelancing,1.4%were running their own business and 2.2%were developing a creative,artistic or professional portfolio.Two fifths of graduates running their own business saw it as their most important activity(4
120、0.7%)and 42.8%of graduates self-employed or freelancing reported it as their most important activity.The number of businesses started by recent graduates(within two years)with formal support from a UK HE provider has increased year-on-year since 2014,with 15,793 graduate start-ups active in 2020/21,
121、employing 46,723 FTE employees and producing an estimated turnover of 3,361,635.2 A total of 4,528 graduate start-ups with formal business/enterprise support from the HE provider were launched in 2020/21,the highest number since data collection began in 2014/15.This reflects the start-up market acro
122、ss the UK,with a record 772,002 new businesses started in 2020,an increase of 13.25%since 2019.3 The UK is ahead of India and China when it comes to start-up funding,with a record-breaking 29.4bn invested in UK start-ups in 2021 and an even greater figure predicted for 2022.4 Research by the Global
123、Entrepreneurs Centre found that nearly 13%of UK adults in 2022 are in the first three months of starting a new business or are already running a young enterprise,compared to 8%in 2020.5 Clearly,the UKs entrepreneurship bubble is booming,and graduates from all disciplines can become creators of their
124、 own businesses or intrapreneurs within established ones.The role of careers and employability professionals in supporting graduates who aspire to entrepreneurship is recognised by UKRI,with examples of Higher Education Innovation Funding(HEIF)being used to support enterprise labs,internships and de
125、velopment programmes for students from any discipline,as well as more traditional graduate start-up services.6 Graduate Outcomes and the future world of workGabi Binnie,head of funded projects at Gradconsult,explores how the snapshot of the past provided by Graduate Outcomes data can inform the supp
126、ort required by the students and graduates of the futureWhat we can say with some certainty is that undertaking a university degree undoubtably helps graduates develop essential skills that will equip them for success in the future.11What do graduates do?2023EXPERT INSIGHTSSkills for the futureIn th
127、eir research for the Department for Education,the Skills and Employability Board identify four categories of skills that they predict will become increasingly important in the labour market of the future:STEM knowledge,including specialist skills such as medicine and dentistry,therapy and counsellin
128、g,and psychology.Skills related to educating and training others,as well as being an active learner.People skills,including negotiation,persuasion,and resolving conflicts.Application of knowledge skills including critical and creative thinking,complex problem solving,and decision-making.Theres some
129、clear commonality between the skills predicted to increase in demand and the skills already required of graduate recruits by employers,7 but theres a gap for a fifth category-skills that will set graduates up for success in the continuously evolving labour market.The World Economic Forum identifies
130、analytical thinking and innovation,technology use and design and resilience,stress tolerance and flexibility amongst their top ten skills for 2025,while other analysts suggest grit,perseverance,driving change and innovation,and emotional control as critical for the future of work.8 The last two year
131、s have shown that attempting to predict the future is a risky business.What we can say with some certainty is that undertaking a university degree undoubtably helps graduates develop essential skills that will equip them for success in the future.The challenge often lies in students recognition and
132、articulation of their skills,which is where extracting and surfacing the employability value of degrees,authentic assessments that mirror the working world and opportunities for interaction with employers(either extracurricular work experience or embedded in the curriculum),can help.But theres anoth
133、er approach too.Experiential learning programmes can be a scalable and quick alternative to adding new content to the curriculum.These opportunities which I like to think of psychological incubators can provide students with the chance to try something new for the first time in conditions that mimic
134、 the hybrid working world,gain feedback and fail fast in a supportive environment.Immersive events,such as the University of Leicesters Enterprise and Innovation Lab,brings the idea of entrepreneurship to life for those who may never have considered it and provides them with the skills and mindset t
135、hey need to thrive in the fast-changing future world of work.Graduate Outcomes and the future world of work12What do graduates do?2023EXPERT INSIGHTSWhen working in higher education we often find ourselves discussing myths and untruths about the sector.This covers a range of things such as the linea
136、rity(or rather not)of graduate career paths,national employment trends,and various other elements of the student experience.Its doubtful that higher education is alone in this regard,and in any industry there are probably things that outside lookers-in think are true when the reality is quite the op
137、posite.This article focuses on one of the myths often encountered which is with regards to graduate migration.There are four ways to think about graduate migration,coined by Charlie Ball nearly a decade ago,and they serve as a useful way to categorise this movement of thousands of people every year.
138、Loyals-studied and now live and work in their home region.Returners-studied in another region,but now live and work in their home one.Stayers-studied in another region and stayed there to live and work.Incomers-studied in one region,and left to live and work in another that isnt their home one.The D
139、ick Whittington fallacy is one of the myths often encountered,in that people assume that most graduates want to and do move to London.Looking at those four categories and UK undergraduates from the 2019/20 Graduate Outcomes survey data,Loyals account for 42%,Returners 26%,Stayers 11%and Incomers 21%
140、.Another way to view this is that two-thirds(68%)of graduates are based in their home region 15 months after graduating.Various factors will influence this,such as family and relationship ties,caring responsibilities,job opportunities and desires,and regional cost of living variations.Across the UK
141、there are significant variations in the percentage of graduates living in their home region after graduation(Loyals plus Returners).Its highest for the home nations outside of England,that is,Northern Ireland(96%),Scotland(88%)and Wales(76%).In England there is broad range,with the West Midlands(75%
142、)and North East(74%)at the top end,and London(52%)at the other.Even though London is the lowest for this score it still means that most of its graduates stay or return there.After London(48%),the stickiest regions that keep or attract graduates(Stayers plus Incomers)are the South West(36%),South Eas
143、t(34%)and Yorkshire and Humber(33%).What does all of this mean for higher education institutions?Most of the graduates originally from the region where you are based will now live there.Many,but by no means all,will have studied with you or another institution in the region.Its a significant number
144、either way,and so graduate-level job opportunities are key to your graduate outcomes.Graduates from institutions across the UK will return and compete for jobs with your local graduates,but viewing it in these competitive terms is fatalistic,as the same applies to almost all institutions and regions
145、.Whats needed are strong partnerships between HEIs and local governments and councils,enterprise communities and regional SMEs,to name an obvious few.Examples of regional graduate schemes already exist,many led by AGCAS members and partners,and it is this co-ordinated effort between relevant stakeho
146、lders that can better surface and create graduate-level employment.Without proactive efforts to showcase and generate graduate-level roles in any region,the majority of graduates may find it harder to secure that type of work.How to respond to graduate migration patternsPaul Gratrick,head of operati
147、ons at the University of Liverpool Careers and Employability Team,considers what the latest data on graduate migration means for higher education patterns Whats needed are strong partnerships between HEIs and local government and councils,enterprise communities and regional SMEs.2019/20 GRADUATES:Re
148、turnersLoyalsIncomersStayers21%26%11%42%13What do graduates do?2023EXPERT INSIGHTSThe graduate labour market broadly follows the fate of the economy,and while the circumstances of COVID were exceptional,the response of many graduate employers was not as severe as many expected.Graduate vacancies dro
149、pped by only 12%in 2019/20.As large parts of the economy shut down,why didnt graduate vacancies fall further?Maybe because many recruitment targets were met when lockdown hit in March 2020,or maybe employers initially thought the pandemic would quickly pass.Id like to think the real reason that busi
150、ness leaders resisted short-term pressures is they realised that to cut recruitment too far would hurt their organisations in the long run.In previous economic downturns,employers who didnt deal effectively with the interns and graduates in their recruitment pipelines damaged their employer brands a
151、nd caused resourcing difficulties that unnecessarily increased their cost base as the economy recovered.Many employers lost business when they couldnt find enough talent to meet the uplift in demand,or they paid a significant premium in the labour market to fill roles which in turn damaged their pro
152、fitability.Unless a business was in a hard-hit sector such as retail or travel,leaders minimised the negative impact to the students in their pipeline to ensure they were able to grow again when the economic climate changed.Many of the graduates who joined organisations in 2020 are now coming to the
153、 end of their training programmes,often into junior management roles.As the COVID crisis deepened,in some sectors hiring remained constant or even increased.Public sector vacancies actually grew by 4%in 2019/20.But other sectors did have to take significant action.Built environment vacancies grew by
154、 25%and retail/FMCG vacancies by 45%.In generalising about the graduate market,we can forget that in reality there are significant sector and regional variations.Impact of online applicationsThe pandemic also impacted student recruitment.As employers moved the entirety of their selection process onl
155、ine,students were able to progress applications without the need to travel.With employers only able to use online channels to reach students,many expanded the range of universities they recruited from.Concerns about the availability of jobs and the decrease in vacancies drove up applications per vac
156、ancy,but so did a more accessible selection process.Students in previous recessions have struggled to disentangle bleak news headlines from the realities of the jobs market(the ISE reported unfilled vacancies in 2009,the worst period in the financial crash).With recruitment levels now well above pre
157、-pandemic levels and students returning to campus life and catching up on missed social experiences,its no surprise that some employers are struggling to attract enough students.The war in Ukraine,and the resultant economic fallout,may yet cause short term damage to the early talent labour market.Bu
158、t as the COVID crisis demonstrated,employers have a long-term need to recruit and retain graduates.Graduate recruitment through the pandemicStephen Isherwood,chief executive at the Institute of Student Employers,explains why graduate recruitment wasnt hit as hard as some may have expected by the COV
159、ID-19 crisisIn previous economic downturns,employers who didnt deal effectively with the interns and graduates in their recruitment pipelines damaged their employer brands and caused resourcing difficulties.BUSINESS AND ADMINISTRATIVE STUDIES15What do graduates do?2023BUSINESS AND ADMINISTRATIVE STU
160、DIESBusiness and administrative studies overviewThe Graduates Outcomes data shows that 57.3%of graduates from all subjects surveyed were in full-time employment and 9.2%in further study.For business and administrative studies graduates,the equivalent figures were 61.2%and 6.3%respectively.Subjects i
161、ncluded within this professional skills cluster include economics,finance and accountancy,business and management,hospitality,leisure,tourism,and transport,and marketing.Employment statusBusiness and administrative studies subjects showed consistently higher than average numbers of graduates in full
162、-time employment,the highest being marketing(68.7%)and the lowest finance and accountancy(58.8%),still above the all-subject average of 57.3%.Civil engineering was the only other subject with higher numbers of graduates in full-time employment(72.1%).The numbers of business and administrative studie
163、s graduates in part-time employment displayed a wide variance,ranging from 5.2%for economics to 14%for hospitality,leisure,tourism,and transport,perhaps reflecting the different nature of these industries.Many graduates were pursuing further study while also working,showing the need for professional
164、 certification in financial sectors but also the flexibility of employers to support continuing professional development.Economics(13%),finance and accountancy(15.5%)and business and management studies(10.7%)were all above the average of 10.6%.Hospitality,leisure,tourism,and transport(7.7%)and marke
165、ting(7.1%)were among the lowest numbers combining working and studying.SalaryEconomics graduates who had undertaken significant further study had the highest average salaries.Even those economics graduates who had not undertaken further study had higher than average salaries,perhaps highlighting the
166、 range of professional career paths and graduate schemes open to this cohort.Hospitality,leisure,tourism and transport graduates had the lowest salaries reported,with marketing graduates close behind.This could reflect the different sizes of employers within these sectors and the competitive nature
167、of the smaller number of graduate schemes available.UnemploymentThe percentage of business and administrative graduates who classed themselves as unemployed,including those due to start work,averaged 6.7%,ranging from 5.4%for marketing to 7%for finance and accountancy and business and management stu
168、dies.This compares with 5.9%for all subjects.Further studyOverall,9.2%of all-subject graduates were engaged solely in further study,compared to 6.3%of business and administrative studies graduates.This could reflect the number of courses where professional qualifications were included in the course(
169、finance and accountancy 5.2%,business and management studies 5.6%).Economics graduates were almost double this figure with 10.7%in further study,perhaps indicating the requirement for professional accreditation in some sectors through ICAEW,ACCA and CIMA not available in their course.Marketing were
170、the least likely of this cohort to be in further study at 4.1%.Emma Lennox,careers consultant at Queens University Belfast,delves into the outcomes data for graduates of business and administrative studies subjectsBusiness and administrative studies subjects showed consistently higher than average n
171、umbers of graduates in full-time employment.Economics35,000015,00010,0005,00020,00025,00030,000Finance and accountancyBusiness and management studiesHospitality,leisure,tourism and transportMarketingAll subjectsAVERAGE SALARIES OF BUSINESS AND ADMINISTRATIVE STUDIES GRADUATES 15 MONTHS AFTER GRADUAT
172、IONAverage salary-no significant further study since graduation()Average salary-significant further study since graduation()30,44531,70824,136-26,09024,712-27,66025,182-27,06924,796-27,54221,77021,46923,49224,97424,88921,69116What do graduates do?2023BUSINESS AND ADMINISTRATIVE STUDIESEconomicsOUTCO
173、MES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSFinance and investment analysts and advisersChartered and certified accountantsManagement consultants and business analystsActuaries,economists and statisticiansData analysts12345Business sales executivesTax
174、ation expertsMarketing associate professionalsFinancial accounts managersBusiness and related research professionals678910Arts,design and media professionals 1.0%2.0%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTTOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSFEMALE 985/MALE 2,270/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:3,255Business,HR and
175、finance professionals 58.9%Education professionals 1.8%Engineering and building professionals 1.4%Health professionals 0.0%Information technology professionals 4.8%Legal,social and welfare professionals 1.9%Managers 4.2%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 7.0%Science professionals 0.2%Other profess
176、ionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.0%Childcare,health and education occupations 0.7%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 9.5%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 5.3%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 0.6%Other occupations 1.6%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,290/MALE 3,2
177、85 TOTAL RESPONSES 4,580TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 1,035OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK60.0%4.6%6.5%10.7%13.0%5.2%Working full time in the UKPostgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e
178、.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherProfessional qualificationMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)6.8%5.2%28.8%57.1%17What do graduates do?2023BUSINESS AND ADMINISTRATIVE STUDIESFinance and accountancyOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSChartered and certified a
179、ccountantsFinance and investment analysts and advisersTaxation expertsManagement consultants and business analystsActuaries,economists and statisticians12345Financial accounts managersFinancial managers and directorsProgrammers and software development professionalsProject support officersData analy
180、sts678910Arts,design and media professionals 0.5%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTTOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSFEMALE 1,505/MALE 2,290/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:3,795Business,HR and finance professionals 51.8%Education professionals 1.2%Engineering and building professionals 0.6%Health profession
181、als 0.0%Information technology professionals 3.7%Legal,social and welfare professionals 0.6%Managers 4.4%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 3.1%Science professionals 0.1%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.4%Childcare,health and education occupations 1.1%Clerical,secretarial
182、and numerical clerks 21.1%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 6.7%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 0.9%Other occupations 3.1%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 2,050/MALE 3,100 TOTAL RESPONSES 5,145TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 1,005OtherUnemployed,including those due to start
183、 workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK58.8%5.2%7.0%5.2%15.5%8.3%Working full time in the UK0.9%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Masters(e.g.MA,MSc)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherProfessional qualification4.8%35.6%5.5%53.3%18What do graduates
184、 do?2023BUSINESS AND ADMINISTRATIVE STUDIESBusiness and management studiesOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSMarketing associate professionalsHuman resources and industrial relations officersBusiness sales executivesManagement consultant
185、s and business analystsChartered and certified accountants12345Sales accounts and business development managersFinance and investment analysts and advisersManagers and directors in retail and wholesaleBusiness and financial project management professionalsBuyers and procurement officers678910TOP TEN
186、 PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 0.9%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 3,925/MALE 4,345/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:8,275Business,HR and finance professionals 23.5%Education professionals 2.0%Engineering and building professionals 3.3%Health professionals 0.1%Informat
187、ion technology professionals 4.3%Legal,social and welfare professionals 1.6%Managers 10.7%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 18.9%Science professionals 0.2%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.7%Childcare,health and education occupations 1.9%Clerical,secretarial and numerical
188、clerks 14.7%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 12.1%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 1.5%Other occupations 2.6%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 5,575/MALE 6,195 TOTAL RESPONSES 11,765TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 1,790OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther
189、 studyWorking and studyingProfessional qualificationWorking part time in the UK61.2%5.6%7.0%5.6%10.7%20.2%9.8%Working full time in the UK1.4%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)9.5%12.3%56.6%19What do graduates do?2023BUS
190、INESS AND ADMINISTRATIVE STUDIESHospitality,leisure,tourism and transportOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSEvents managers and organisersMarketing associate professionalsHuman resources and industrial relations officersBusiness sales ex
191、ecutivesRestaurant and catering establishment managers and proprietors12345Project support officersHotel and accommodation managers and proprietorsSales accounts and business development managersSports coaches,instructors and officialsManagers and directors in retail and wholesale678910TOP TEN PROFE
192、SSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 1.3%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 1,025/MALE 455/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:1,480Business,HR and finance professionals 18.3%Education professionals 3.2%Engineering and building professionals 0.6%Health professionals 0.2%Information tech
193、nology professionals 0.6%Legal,social and welfare professionals 1.5%Managers 9.0%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 13.6%Science professionals 0.1%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 4.1%Childcare,health and education occupations 4.0%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 15
194、.6%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 20.7%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 3.0%Other occupations 4.2%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,455/MALE 630 TOTAL RESPONSES 2,085TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 240OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking
195、and studyingWorking part time in the UK61.1%6.1%6.1%5.0%7.7%14.0%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification11.3%1.2%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)9.5%12.3%65.8%20What do graduates do?2023BUSINESS AND ADMI
196、NISTRATIVE STUDIESMarketingOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSMarketing associate professionalsPublic relations professionalsBusiness sales executivesSales accounts and business development managersMarketing and commercial managers12345H
197、uman resources and industrial relations officersBuyers and procurement officersBusiness and related research professionalsManagement consultants and business analystsDatabase administrators and web content technicians678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 2.0%TYPE OF WORK
198、 FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 1,060/MALE 670/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:1,730Business,HR and finance professionals 9.6%Education professionals 1.2%Engineering and building professionals 0.8%Health professionals 0.0%Information technology professionals 2.4%Legal,social and welfare professionals 0
199、.9%Managers 4.7%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 55.1%Science professionals 0.2%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 0.6%Childcare,health and education occupations 1.1%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 7.1%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 11.2%Skilled trades,craft
200、s and other vocational occupations 1.1%Other occupations 2.0%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,385/MALE 915TOTAL RESPONSES 2,300TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 240OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK68.7%3.9%5.4%4.1%7.1%10.9%Wo
201、rking full time in the UKProfessional qualification14.6%1.3%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)10.4%12.4%61.3%CREATIVEARTS22What do graduates do?2023CREATIVE ARTSThe Graduate Outcomes data concerns five areas of creative
202、 arts study:fine arts,design,media studies,performing arts,and cinematics and photography.Approximately 20,400 creative arts graduates completed the survey(10.6%of total respondents),of which 64%identified as female and 36%male.Of these respondents,13,040 were working in the UK with the female/male
203、split remaining at 64%to 36%.Five key data points1.Creative arts graduates are more likely to work in non-graduate roles than the average for all graduates(41%compared to 28%).Setting up their own enterprises,working in a number of temporary/freelance roles,and supporting societal and non-government
204、 organisations is equivalent.2.On average,creative arts graduates are three times more likely to be working in freelance/self-employed roles.3.Creative arts graduates are less likely to go on to further study(4.7%)compared to the average across all subjects(9.2%).4.Completing a creative arts postgra
205、duate course can lead to higher graduate earnings in the creative industries.We do not have the data to align PG study with their previous undergraduate study,but it is noteworthy that completing a creative arts postgraduate programme leads to significantly higher earnings(approximately 10%).5.Cleri
206、cal and retail work appear to be high for creative arts graduates.However,when aligned to all subjects,these are equally high for all graduates.Employment and entrepreneurshipAlthough the number of creative arts graduates working for an employer(56.5%)was significantly below the average across all s
207、ubjects(68.1%),nearly 13%of creative arts graduates cite running their own business(2.8%)or self-employment/freelancing(9.9%)as their main activity.This is almost triple the number of graduates from other subjects(4.4%).If you also consider the number of creative arts graduates developing a creative
208、 artistic or professional portfolio(9.1%),which is significantly higher than all other subjects(avg 2.2%),this more than makes up for the deficit in employment figures.Although the number of self-employed creative graduates is below the sector average-with the creative industries as a whole reportin
209、g 32%freelancers,compared to 16%in other sectors in 2021-the ratio follows an interesting trend,with creative arts graduates nearly tripling the percentage of entrepreneurial graduates from other subject areas.Entrepreneurial creative arts graduates are more likely to be working in creative occupati
210、ons aligned to their subject while occupations of creative arts graduates working for an employer are more varied,with top results showing teaching,retail and hospitality among creative occupations in design,marketing,photography,and broadcasting.The number of creative arts graduates who worked one
211、job since graduation(52.6%)is more than 10%lower than the average across all subjects(63.7%).However,the percentage of those who have worked two or more since graduation is consistently higher,with those working five or more(1.7%)significantly higher than the average across other subjects(0.4%).This
212、 could be reflective of those working to support entrepreneurial activities or be a comment on the nature of the creative industries.Unemployment among creative arts graduates(6.5%)was the highest across all subjects(5.9%).Creative arts overviewMiriam Firth,senior lecturer and academic lead for Asse
213、ssments in the Flexible Learning Programme at The University of Manchester,and Elli Whitefoot,assistant careers,employability&enterprise manager at Leeds Arts University consider the outcomes for creative arts graduatesIt is evident that considering employment and entrepreneurship destinations under
214、 one banner is important as they are so entwined.EMPLOYMENT LOOKS DIFFERENT FOR CREATIVE ARTS GRADUATESCreative arts graduate working for an employerCreative arts graduates running their own business or self-employed/freelanceCreative arts graduates developing a creative artistic or professional por
215、tfolioAll graduates averageAll graduates averageAll graduates average56.5%12.7%9.1%68.1%4.4%2.2%23What do graduates do?2023CREATIVE ARTSCreative arts overviewCreative arts in context While the Graduate Outcomes data infers employment patterns for creative arts graduates,we also need to look beyond t
216、his data to get the full picture:Graduate roles in the creative industries confirmed by creative arts graduates are not stratified enough to distinguish the range of roles completed.Therefore,the data does not fully account for all creative industries graduate roles.Employers and graduates do not al
217、ways align a creative industries role in the same way as the sector.Therefore,the data does not always accurately identify all graduates working in these roles.Graduate Outcomes reflects main activities,so does not provide insight into creative arts graduates who rely on other employment to subsidis
218、e their bills whilst pursuing entrepreneurial activities.The creative industries represent 5.9%of the UK economy.2 The number of jobs has increased by a third in the last ten years,which is significantly higher than overall employment across the nation.3 There is,therefore,the potential for creative
219、 arts students to find graduate employment in the UK labour market.Accounting for the nature of the creative industries,it is evident that considering employment and entrepreneurship destinations under one banner is important as they are so entwined.The number of creative arts graduates working on e
220、ntrepreneurial activities,alongside those who have worked more than one job since graduation,highlights the need for a robust enterprise education for all creative students as an equal part of their careers education,rather than as an addition.24What do graduates do?2023CREATIVE ARTSArtOUTCOMES FIFT
221、EEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSArtistsMarketing associate professionalsSecondary education teaching professionalsGraphic and multimedia designersScience,engineering and production technicians n.e.c.12345Teaching professionals n.e.c.Primary educat
222、ion teaching professionalsArts officers,producers and directorsBusiness sales executivesPublic relations professionals678910Arts,design and media professionals 25.8%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTTOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSFEMALE 740/MALE 155/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:895Business,HR and finan
223、ce professionals 2.5%Education professionals 8.0%Engineering and building professionals 0.3%Health professionals 0.6%Information technology professionals 0.9%Legal,social and welfare professionals 1.9%Managers 2.5%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 6.4%Science professionals 1.6%Other professionals
224、,associate professionals,technicians 0.5%Childcare,health and education occupations 9.4%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 7.7%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 22.2%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 5.2%Other occupations 4.5%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,280/MALE 290TOTAL
225、 RESPONSES 1,565TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 240OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK36.4%8.3%7.9%5.9%11.9%29.6%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification10.4%1.7%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(includ
226、ing PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)21.9%15.1%50.9%25What do graduates do?2023CREATIVE ARTSDesignOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSGraphic and multimedia designersMarketing associate professionalsInt
227、erior designersClothing,fashion and accessories designersDesign occupations n.e.c.12345Public relations professionalsArtistsWeb design professionalsCAD,drawing and architectural techniciansBuyers and procurement officers678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 39.3%TYPE OF
228、WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 3,250/MALE 1,230/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:4,480Business,HR and finance professionals 2.2%Education professionals 2.4%Engineering and building professionals 3.5%Health professionals 0.1%Information technology professionals 3.4%Legal,social and welfare professio
229、nals 0.6%Managers 3.2%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 11.8%Science professionals 0.7%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 0.4%Childcare,health and education occupations 2.5%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 6.7%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 15.4%Skilled trades
230、,crafts and other vocational occupations 4.0%Other occupations 3.7%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 4,920/MALE 1,895 TOTAL RESPONSES 6,810TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 600OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK53.1%5.4%6.2%3.4%6.
231、9%24.9%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification7.2%1.2%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)14.6%15.5%61.5%26What do graduates do?2023CREATIVE ARTSMedia studiesOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF C
232、OURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSMarketing associate professionalsPublic relations professionalsArts officers,producers and directorsPhotographers,audio-visual and broadcasting equipment operatorsGraphic and multimedia designers12345Human resources and industrial relations officersBu
233、siness sales executivesBusiness and related research professionalsAuthors,writers and translatorsProgrammers and software development professionals678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 21.5%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 1,000/MALE 720/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN
234、THE UK:1,715Business,HR and finance professionals 5.1%Education professionals 2.2%Engineering and building professionals 0.4%Health professionals 0.1%Information technology professionals 3.7%Legal,social and welfare professionals 1.4%Managers 2.1%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 22.6%Science pro
235、fessionals 0.6%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 0.7%Childcare,health and education occupations 2.8%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 11.0%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 19.5%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 1.5%Other occupations 4.9%SURVEY
236、RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,455/MALE 1,100 TOTAL RESPONSES 2,555TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 335OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK50.7%5.5%7.6%5.0%9.1%22.1%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification7.5%3.0%Postgr
237、aduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)16.1%12.8%60.5%27What do graduates do?2023CREATIVE ARTSPerforming artsOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSActors,entertainers and
238、 presentersSecondary education teaching professionalsMusiciansTeaching professionals n.e.c.Arts officers,producers and directors12345Marketing associate professionalsPhotographers,audio-visual and broadcasting equipment operatorsPrimary education teaching professionalsDancers and choreographersHuman
239、 resources and industrial relations officers678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 26.7%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 2,170/MALE 1,450/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:3,620Business,HR and finance professionals 3.0%Education professionals 13.8%Engineering and bu
240、ilding professionals 0.5%Health professionals 0.2%Information technology professionals 1.4%Legal,social and welfare professionals 1.5%Managers 3.3%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 5.1%Science professionals 0.4%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.3%Childcare,health and educa
241、tion occupations 6.7%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 9.7%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 18.3%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 3.7%Other occupations 4.4%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 3,435/MALE 2,355 TOTAL RESPONSES 5,790TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 975Othe
242、rUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK42.4%6.0%5.7%6.5%12.3%27.1%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification7.6%3.0%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g
243、.MA,MSc)21.9%12.8%54.7%28What do graduates do?2023CREATIVE ARTSCinematics and photographyOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYPROFESSIONAL JOBSArts officers,producers and directorsPhotographers,audio-visual and broadcasting equipment operatorsGraphic and m
244、ultimedia designersMarketing associate professionalsPublic relations professionals12345Authors,writers and translatorsArtistsBusiness and related research professionalsManagers and directors in retail and wholesaleBusiness sales executives678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professi
245、onals 38.3%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 1,220/MALE 1,110/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:2,330Business,HR and finance professionals 2.7%Education professionals 1.3%Engineering and building professionals 0.5%Health professionals 0.4%Information technology professionals 1.5%Legal,social an
246、d welfare professionals 1.1%Managers 3.2%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 7.7%Science professionals 0.6%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 0.7%Childcare,health and education occupations 3.6%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 10.3%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff
247、19.9%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 3.5%Other occupations 4.8%SURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,900/MALE 1,770 TOTAL RESPONSES 3,670TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 345OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK
248、47.5%6.1%7.2%3.4%7.4%28.4%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification8.4%0.7%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)16.0%19.6%55.4%TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERINGAND MATHS30What do graduates do?2023TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERING AN
249、D MATHSThe skills gap in science,technology,engineering and maths(STEM)is a long-standing issue,with an estimated shortfall of 173,000 workers in the STEM sector.1 Alongside more applied technical roles,the governments recruitment targets for secondary school teachers have been persistently missed,p
250、articularly in shortage subjects like maths and science.2 A glance at the list of UK shortage occupations reveals how highly sought after these graduates are.DestinationsThe 2019/20 Graduate Outcomes data shows that graduates from technology and engineering disciplines have higher full-time employme
251、nt rates than the all-graduate average(57.3%).Within the technology and engineering group,civil engineering graduates continue to have the highest full-time employment rate(72.1%),followed by electrical and electronic engineering(68.5%),chemical engineering(67.8%),architecture and building(67.2%),me
252、chanical engineering(66.1%)and IT(64.1%).The full-time employment rate for maths graduates is slightly below the others(56.0%).However,this can be explained by the significant number who pursued further study(14.1%)or were both working and studying(10.9%).Graduates from all technology,engineering an
253、d maths disciplines were more likely to enter graduate-level jobs than the all-graduate average(74.0%).The civil engineering rate was the highest(91.4%),followed by architecture and building(89.2%)and chemical engineering(88.3%).Types of workThe data shows engineering graduates typically find roles
254、relevant to their degree with,at the higher end 78.1%of civil engineering graduates,and at the lower 40.8%of chemical engineering graduates,working as engineering professionals.Chemical engineering also had a notable proportion going into business,HR and finance(19.5%),perhaps related to fewer oppor
255、tunities in some more traditional chemical engineering routes,such as oil and gas.3Maths graduates were spread into more sectors,such as teaching,finance,management consultants and business analysts,and programmers and software development professionals,which shows the broad demand for their skillse
256、t.More than two-thirds of IT professionals(67.7%)were in roles related to their degree,which may not be surprising with more technology vacancies being advertised over the last year than in any other sector,showing the high demand for these skills.4Salaries The salary range for technology,engineerin
257、g and maths graduates varies depending on the subject studied.When graduates had not pursued significant study since graduation,IT had a salary range that spanned from 21,509 to 34,840.Highest of the engineering graduates were chemical engineering at 29,944,with mechanical engineering the lowest at
258、27,685,but still comparing favourably to the all-subject average(24,974).Architecture and building graduates had the lowest salary range from 21,451 to 27,677.Its worth noting that pursuing significant study had only a negligible effect on salary.Further studyFor civil engineering,architecture and b
259、uilding,electrical and electronic engineering the rates going into further study were generally low compared to the average for all graduates(9.2%),perhaps due to the vocational nature of these degrees and the demand for graduates from these disciplines.The rate of chemical engineering graduates pur
260、suing further education was slightly higher than average(9.8%).The level of maths graduates pursuing further study was much higher(14.1%).Of these,it is no surprise to see a greater proportion studying a postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE),given that one top job for maths gradua
261、tes is secondary education teaching professional.Technology,engineering and maths overviewMark Allen,careers consultant at Imperial College London,provides a rundown of the destinations,types of work and salaries of graduates from technology,engineering and maths subjectsGraduates from technology an
262、d engineering disciplines have higher full-time employment rates than the all-graduate average.A SIGNIFICANT PROPORTION OF MATHS GRADUATES CHOSE TO MOVE INTO FURTHER STUDYMaths graduates in full-time employmentMaths graduates in further study(compared to 9.2%for all graduates)Maths graduates working
263、 and studying10.9%14.1%56%31What do graduates do?2023TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERING AND MATHSComputer sciencePROFESSIONAL JOBSProgrammers and software development professionalsIT user support techniciansCyber security professionalsGraphic and multimedia designersIT business analysts,architects and systems d
264、esigners12345Information technology professionals n.e.c.IT operations techniciansIT quality and testing professionalsMarketing associate professionalsData analysts678910Arts,design and media professionals 6.2%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTTOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSFEMALE 835/MALE 4,980/TOTAL IN
265、 EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:5,820Business,HR and finance professionals 3.9%Education professionals 1.9%Engineering and building professionals 1.1%Health professionals 0.0%Information technology professionals 67.7%Legal,social and welfare professionals 0.4%Managers 2.1%Marketing,PR and sales professionals
266、1.8%Science professionals 0.2%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 0.6%Childcare,health and education occupations 0.7%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 2.9%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 6.2%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 1.4%Other occupation
267、s 2.8%OUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,160/MALE 7,115 TOTAL RESPONSES 8,275OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK64.1%4.0%7.8%5.2%7.6%11.3%Working full time in the UKTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FUR
268、THER STUDYTOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 920Professional qualification14.1%8.9%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)8.5%14.4%54.0%32What do graduates do?2023TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERING AND MATHSMathematicsOUTCOMES FIF
269、TEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,480/MALE 2,655 TOTAL RESPONSES 4,130OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK56.0%5.1%7.1%14.1%10.9%6.8%Working full time in the UKTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYTOTAL N
270、UMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 985Professional qualification19.6%20.4%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)Other11.9%5.7%Masters(e.g.MA,MSc)42.5%PROFESSIONAL JOBSProgrammers and software development professionalsActuaries,economists and statis
271、ticiansSecondary education teaching professionalsFinance and investment analysts and advisersChartered and certified accountants12345Data analystsIT business analysts,architects and systems designersManagement consultants and business analystsInformation technology professionals n.e.c.Business and r
272、elated research professionals678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 0.6%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 1,055/MALE 1,705/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:2,755Business,HR and finance professionals 39.8%Education professionals 13.5%Engineering and building professi
273、onals 1.3%Health professionals 0.0%Information technology professionals 20.7%Legal,social and welfare professionals 0.9%Managers 1.9%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 2.0%Science professionals 0.6%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.2%Childcare,health and education occupatio
274、ns 1.7%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 7.8%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 5.3%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 0.9%Other occupations 1.6%33What do graduates do?2023TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERING AND MATHSArchitecture and buildingOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATION
275、TYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,255/MALE 2,505 TOTAL RESPONSES 3,760TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 452OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK67.2%4.9%5.1%4.1%8.8%10.0%Working full time i
276、n the UKProfessional qualification17.6%1.8%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)7.0%13.1%60.5%PROFESSIONAL JOBSQuantity surveyorsCAD,drawing and architectural techniciansChartered surveyorsChartered architectural technolog
277、ists,planning officers and consultantsProduction managers and directorsin construction12345Construction project managers and related professionalsArchitectsCivil engineersEstimators,valuers and assessorsInterior designers678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 3.6%TYPE OF
278、WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 875/MALE 1,895/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:2,770Business,HR and finance professionals 3.4%Education professionals 0.4%Engineering and building professionals 68.7%Health professionals 0.0%Information technology professionals 0.4%Legal,social and welfare profession
279、als 0.4%Managers 8.7%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 1.9%Science professionals 0.4%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.2%Childcare,health and education occupations 0.6%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 2.2%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 4.3%Skilled trades,cr
280、afts and other vocational occupations 1.7%Other occupations 2.1%34What do graduates do?2023TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERING AND MATHSCivil engineeringOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 380/MALE 1,435 TOTAL RESPONSES 1,815TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADU
281、ATES INFURTHER STUDY 250OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK72.1%4.0%5.4%7.0%7.6%3.9%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification13.1%9.6%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,
282、MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)7.4%6.9%63.0%PROFESSIONAL JOBSCivil engineersEngineering professionals n.e.c.Construction project managers andrelated professionalsProduction managers and directorsin constructionEngineering project managers and project engineers12345Chartered surveyorsEnvironment
283、professionalsBuilding and civil engineering techniciansCAD,drawing and architectural techniciansManagement consultants and business analysts678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 0.6%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 295/MALE 1,085/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:1
284、,380Business,HR and finance professionals 3.9%Education professionals 0.7%Engineering and building professionals 78.1%Health professionals 0.0%Information technology professionals 1.1%Legal,social and welfare professionals 0.1%Managers 3.4%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 1.0%Science professiona
285、ls 1.0%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.4%Childcare,health and education occupations 0.4%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 2.0%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 2.8%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 1.0%Other occupations 2.4%35What do graduat
286、es do?2023TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERING AND MATHSElectrical and electronic engineeringOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 170/MALE 1,460 TOTAL RESPONSES 1,625TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 240OtherUnemployed,including those due t
287、o start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK68.5%4.1%5.4%7.7%8.5%5.9%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification13.5%22.4%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)5.8%15.4%43.0%PROFESSIONA
288、L JOBSElectrical engineersProgrammers and software development professionalsElectronics engineersEngineering professionals n.e.c.IT business analysts,architects and systems designers12345Engineering project managers and project engineersProduction and process engineersEngineering techniciansIT quali
289、ty and testing professionalsIT user support technicians678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 0.9%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 120/MALE 1,075/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:1,195Business,HR and finance professionals 3.6%Education professionals 0.9%Engineering
290、 and building professionals 47.9%Health professionals 0.0%Information technology professionals 24.9%Legal,social and welfare professionals 0.3%Managers 4.6%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 1.6%Science professionals 0.7%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 0.6%Childcare,health
291、and education occupations 0.4%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 1.3%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 3.4%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 5.9%Other occupations 3.1%36What do graduates do?2023TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERING AND MATHSMechanical engineeringOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MON
292、THS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 380/MALE 2,850 TOTAL RESPONSES 3,235TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 510OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK66.1%4.2%6.4%9.0%8.3%6.0%Wo
293、rking full time in the UKProfessional qualification10.6%20.1%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)6.4%9.1%53.8%PROFESSIONAL JOBSMechanical engineersEngineering professionals n.e.c.Engineering project managers and project e
294、ngineersProduction and process engineersProgrammers and software development professionals12345Management consultants and business analystsCAD,drawing and architectural techniciansEngineering techniciansOfficers in armed forcesBusiness sales executives678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and m
295、edia professionals 0.6%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 285/MALE 2,055/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:2,340Business,HR and finance professionals 8.0%Education professionals 1.7%Engineering and building professionals 55.5%Health professionals 0.1%Information technology professionals 7.3%Lega
296、l,social and welfare professionals 0.2%Managers 4.9%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 2.3%Science professionals 0.8%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.5%Childcare,health and education occupations 0.6%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 2.6%Retail,catering,waiting and
297、bar staff 4.7%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 5.0%Other occupations 4.3%37What do graduates do?2023TECHNOLOGY,ENGINEERING AND MATHSChemical engineeringOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 360/MALE 1,085 TOTAL R
298、ESPONSES 1,445TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 235OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK67.8%3.4%6.5%9.8%7.5%4.9%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification13.1%26.1%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including
299、 PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)7.3%5.1%48.4%PROFESSIONAL JOBSProduction and process engineersEngineering professionals n.e.c.Programmers and software development professionalsManagement consultants and business analystsEngineering project managers and project e
300、ngineers12345Health and safety managers and officersFinance and investment analysts and advisersChartered and certified accountantsBusiness associate professionals n.e.c.Data analysts678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 0.7%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 275
301、/MALE 770/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:1,040Business,HR and finance professionals 19.5%Education professionals 1.5%Engineering and building professionals 40.8%Health professionals 0.1%Information technology professionals 10.0%Legal,social and welfare professionals 0.2%Managers 3.6%Marketing,PR and
302、sales professionals 3.2%Science professionals 3.8%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 5.1%Childcare,health and education occupations 1.0%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 2.8%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 3.5%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations
303、0.6%Other occupations 0.7%HUMANITIES39What do graduates do?2023HUMANITIESHumanities degrees have made headlines for all the wrong reasons in 2022.Attacks have come from those who believe the field is elitist and outdated1 and politicians have promised to phase out university degrees that do not impr
304、ove students earning potential.2 Less directly,student numbers have fallen as a result of the systematic promotion of other fields,particularly,for instance,business management.3Data on graduate earnings,work and further study reveals that humanities graduates enter a very broad range of professions
305、 and are more inclined than average to carry on studying after graduation.Work and studyThe Graduate Outcomes survey results show the proportion of humanities graduates in full or part-time work across all subjects is below average(average 68.7%).This is balanced by above average percentages of grad
306、uates engaging in study,or work and study,across all humanities subjects.For example,27.8%of history graduates were engaged in further study compared to the overall average of 19.8%.The humanities graduates that chose to study were most likely to be enrolled in a Masters course or a postgraduate dip
307、loma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE).UnemploymentUnemployment for humanities graduates was above the overall average rate of 5.9%,especially in English(7.3%),history(7.9%)and philosophy(7.3%).However,these rates were comparable with some science and social science subjects including physics(7.7%
308、),law(7.4%)and IT(7.8%).SalariesFor humanities graduates,mean salaries were below the overall average of 24,974(for those without significant further study).For example,the average salary for English literature graduates 15 months after graduation was 20,593,and for history graduates,22,589.The jobs
309、 and sectors chosen by humanities graduates are likely to contribute to this lower earnings figure.In addition,the high proportion of females studying humanities subjects(for example 82%of English literature graduates in the survey were female,and 73%of languages graduates)exacerbates the adverse im
310、pact of the graduate gender pay gap.4SectorsEducation was the most popular sector chosen by graduates from all humanities subjects in the Graduate Outcomes survey.Many graduates were also engaged in Public administration and defence;compulsory social security,and in a wide range of other sectors,fro
311、m Human health activities to Financial service activities,except insurance and pension funding and Legal and accounting activities.This breadth of options demonstrates the versatility of an education that teaches problem solving,critical thinking and social awareness.It also highlights the potential
312、ly overwhelming choice faced by graduates,and therefore the benefit of work-related exploration and experiences while studying.Skills and confidence The Handshake 2032 report5 suggested that career confidence drops throughout university,with 33%of students surveyed saying they feel very confident ab
313、out their career prospects during year one,dropping to 31%in year two-and to 17%in year three.However,according to the British Academys 2020 report Qualified for the Future6,skills such as communication,collaboration,research and analysis,independence,creativity and adaptability give humanities grad
314、uates access to sectors which underpin the UK economy and are among the fastest growing.Accessing these opportunities requires students to have both the necessary skills and crucially,the confidence to recognise their own employability.Humanities overviewLouise Ogle,careers consultant at Royal Hollo
315、way,University of London,takes a look at employment,salary and type of work outcomes for humanities graduatesHumanities graduates enter a very broad range of professions and are more inclined than average to carry on studying after graduation.40What do graduates do?2023HUMANITIESEnglish literatureOU
316、TCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 1,700/MALE 370 TOTAL RESPONSES 2,070OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK46.3%6.3%6.6%12.6%14.4%13.8%Working full time in the UKTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STU
317、DYTOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 535Professional qualification5.5%4.9%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)Other22.1%7.6%Masters(e.g.MA,MSc)59.9%PROFESSIONAL JOBSSecondary education teaching professionalsMarketing associate professional
318、sPublic relations professionalsAuthors,writers and translatorsPrimary education teaching professionals12345Human resources and industrial relations officersNewspaper and periodical journalists and reportersTeaching professionals n.e.c.Business sales executivesWelfare and housing associate profession
319、als n.e.c.678910Arts,design and media professionals 11.0%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTTOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSFEMALE 1,105/MALE 200/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:1,305Business,HR and finance professionals 6.4%Education professionals 18.5%Engineering and building professionals 0.7%Health prof
320、essionals 0.0%Information technology professionals 1.5%Legal,social and welfare professionals 3.3%Managers 2.4%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 17.1%Science professionals 0.0%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.4%Childcare,health and education occupations 6.9%Clerical,secre
321、tarial and numerical clerks 13.2%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 13.8%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 1.5%Other occupations 2.3%41What do graduates do?2023HUMANITIESEnglishOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYSURVEY RESPONSE:FE
322、MALE 1,800/MALE 465 TOTAL RESPONSES 2,270TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 640OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK42.3%6.6%7.3%13.9%15.0%14.9%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification5.5%4.6%Postgraduate dipl
323、oma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)22.0%5.6%62.2%PROFESSIONAL JOBSSecondary education teaching professionalsMarketing associate professionalsPublic relations professionalsAuthors,writers and translatorsPrimary education teaching professi
324、onals12345Newspaper and periodical journalists and reportersBusiness sales executivesTeaching professionals n.e.c.Human resources and industrial relations officersArts officers,producers and directors678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 11.4%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EM
325、PLOYMENTFEMALE 1,105/MALE 255/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:1,360Business,HR and finance professionals 7.8%Education professionals 18.4%Engineering and building professionals 0.4%Health professionals 0.1%Information technology professionals 2.2%Legal,social and welfare professionals 4.4%Managers 2.5
326、%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 18.1%Science professionals 0.2%Other professionals,associate professionals,technicians 1.1%Childcare,health and education occupations 5.0%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 11.4%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 14.1%Skilled trades,crafts and other vo
327、cational occupations 1.2%Other occupations 1.9%42What do graduates do?2023HUMANITIESHistoryOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 3,045/MALE 2,670 TOTAL RESPONSES 5,710TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 1,655OtherUnemployed,inclu
328、ding those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK44.1%7.1%7.9%16.9%12.8%11.2%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification8.5%4.6%Postgraduate diploma or certificate(including PGCE/PGDE)Doctorate(e.g.PhD,DPhil,MPhil,MRes)OtherMasters(e.g.MA,MSc)18.6%4.8
329、%63.6%PROFESSIONAL JOBSSecondary education teaching professionalsMarketing associate professionalsHuman resources and industrial relations officersPublic relations professionalsChartered and certified accountants12345Primary education teaching professionalsBusiness sales executivesBusiness and relat
330、ed research professionalsManagement consultants and business analystsWelfare and housing associate professionals n.e.c.678910TOP TEN PROFESSIONAL JOBSArts,design and media professionals 4.8%TYPE OF WORK FOR THOSE IN EMPLOYMENTFEMALE 1,920/MALE 1,555/TOTAL IN EMPLOYMENT IN THE UK:3,475Business,HR and
331、 finance professionals 15.5%Education professionals 12.5%Engineering and building professionals 1.1%Health professionals 0.1%Information technology professionals 1.8%Legal,social and welfare professionals 6.8%Managers 3.7%Marketing,PR and sales professionals 10.3%Science professionals 0.5%Other prof
332、essionals,associate professionals,technicians 2.5%Childcare,health and education occupations 4.4%Clerical,secretarial and numerical clerks 15.6%Retail,catering,waiting and bar staff 15.8%Skilled trades,crafts and other vocational occupations 1.5%Other occupations 3.2%43What do graduates do?2023HUMAN
333、ITIESLanguagesOUTCOMES FIFTEEN MONTHS AFTER GRADUATIONTYPE OF COURSE FOR THOSE IN FURTHER STUDYSURVEY RESPONSE:FEMALE 3,090/MALE 1,125 TOTAL RESPONSES 4,215TOTAL NUMBER OFGRADUATES INFURTHER STUDY 975OtherUnemployed,including those due to start workFurther studyWorking and studyingWorking part time in the UK49.5%7.1%6.9%12.0%12.2%12.3%Working full time in the UKProfessional qualification10.0%5.1%P