Economic Skills and Employability for Stage 3 Programmes - ECON6040

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Module delivery information

Location Term Level1 Credits (ECTS)2 Current Convenor3 2024 to 2025
Canterbury
Combined Autumn Spring Summer 6 3 (1.5) Fernanda Leite Lopez de Leon checkmark-circle

Overview

The module helps prepare students to acquire and develop the employability and transferable skills necessary to search and successfully apply for work experience and graduate opportunities in the commercial and public sector and postgraduate study.
The curriculum builds on knowledge and experience gained in related employability modules delivered at Stages 1 and 2, providing further guidance and more advanced practical exercises in application writing, CVs, careers advice, interview and assessment centre techniques, numeracy and competency tests, and psychometric evaluation. The aims here are to support students during their final year in applying for good graduate jobs and MSc degree programmes.

Details

Contact hours

Total contact hours: 15 hours
Private study hours: 15
Total study hours: 30

Usually comprised of:
Students will attend a series of talks, workshops and one-to-one meetings designed to introduce, develop and support the broad range of employability and transferable skills required to prepare for and obtain an internship or graduate job opportunity. All activities will be led by the School Director of Employability and the Placement and Employability Coordinator in conjunction with the Careers and Employability Service.
Talks will provide targeted advice to Stage 3 Economics students on different careers paths, different MSc programmes and, if necessary, on how to obtain an internship after attending university. The talks will take place in Autumn Term and will constitute 4 formal contact hours in total.
Workshops will provide guidance and support across a range of graduate employability related tasks including CV and application writing, assessment centre and interview techniques, numeracy and competency testing, and psychometric evaluation. Workshops will run in the Autumn and Spring Terms and will constitute up to 8 formal contact hours in total.
One-to–one meetings will provide bespoke advice and support to students as queries arise throughout the year. They will also provide feedback opportunities to students as they progress through the stages of the application process. One-to-one meetings will operate through drop-in sessions which run throughout the Autumn, Spring and Summer Terms and will constitute approximately 3 formal contact hours on average for each student in total.
Alongside formal contact hours, students are expected to commit a further 15 hours to the module across the academic year via independent study.

Availability

Students registered on Single or Joint Honours Degree Programmes in Economics but not Sociology and Economics, Law and Economics or Social Anthropology and Economics.

Method of assessment

Participation and Engagement.

The module is non-contributory and does not 'count' towards the formal 240 (or 270 for year in industry degrees) credit classification of Economics degree programmes.

The module develops transferable skills designed to enhance employability and the knowledge, understanding and skills necessary to search and secure graduate job opportunities in a competitive economic environment. This module also prepares students for entry onto Economics and other related MSc programmes within the UK and abroad. Students will be given guidance on the level of engagement expected and the assessment requirements for the module. Students will receive on-going feedback as part of the activities undertaken on the module.

Students who participate (engage) in the talks, workshops and one-to-one meetings, and who complete tasks and activities undertaken as part of the workshop and one-to-one meetings will be deemed to have met the module learning outcomes (MLOs 8.1-8.5 and 9.1-9.5) and will have this added to their transcript and Higher Education Achievement Report (HEAR).

Indicative reading

• S. Cottrell (2015), Skills for Success, Palgrave Macmillan
• F. Trought (2011), Brilliant Employability Skills, Prentice Hall
• S. Rook (2013), The Graduate Career Guidebook, Palgrave Macmillan
• Kent Careers and Employability Service
• https://www.kent.ac.uk/economics/employability/index.html
• Employability for Economics Stage 3 Students (Moodle module)
• Prospects
• Graduates First
• efinancialcareers

Learning outcomes

On successfully completing the module students will be able to:
8.1 Understand career and postgraduate further study opportunities in Economics and related fields for Economics graduates in the UK and overseas
8.2 Have understanding of how to search, prepare and apply for graduate jobs
8.3 Understand the importance of obtaining and applying for work experience in the field in which they wish to pursue their career
8.4 Have understanding and experience of different recruitment processes employed by business and government
8.5 Understand and have practice of graduate job and MSc application writing, CV and cover letter writing, and interview techniques of all types (face to face, telephone and video), competency tests and team based recruitment exercises

Notes

  1. Credit level 6. Higher level module usually taken in Stage 3 of an undergraduate degree.
  2. ECTS credits are recognised throughout the EU and allow you to transfer credit easily from one university to another.
  3. The named convenor is the convenor for the current academic session.
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