11/01/2023

Facilitating Faculty Engagement in Undergraduate Career Development

By Terry Cummins and Lauren Granese

In a study conducted by Eagan et al. (2016), approximately 85% of undergraduate students reported that getting a good job was one of their main deciding factors for attending college. Researchers at the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE) showed an increase in the average number of job offers among students who utilized at least one type of career service versus students who did not; job offer averages increased for each additional service used (VanDerziel, 2022). This study demonstrates how effective and vital career services are within higher education when it comes to post-graduation career plans. However, higher education career development professionals often have high caseloads and cannot deliver individual, ongoing support to every student (NACE, 2022). 

During the NCDA Career Teaching Academy in 2022, career development professionals in attendance voiced a strong desire to collaborate with faculty members at their colleges. Yet, they were struggling to find a way to engage with them and embed career development into the curriculum. To better understand faculty perceptions of career development, practitioners at Penn State University collected information from a randomly selected group of faculty.

The goals of this study were to understand the following:

Survey Creation and Results

To help faculty understand more specifically the purpose and context of the questions, the survey defined career development/planning at the beginning of the survey as the following:

The survey comprised an Institutional Research Board (IRB) statement that signaled consent to research, 13 multiple choice, 5-point Likert scale questions (including branch questions), and two short answer questions. Researchers emailed the survey to 1,000 faculty in the College of the Liberal Arts and the College of Health & Human Development at the University Park campus of Penn State University. After emailing two reminders, they received a 15% response rate. The median completion time of the survey was three minutes and four seconds.

The survey was sent to those identified as full-time faculty: tenure track, teaching, research, and clinical; 48% of respondents identified themselves as tenured faculty and 75% of all responding faculty had ten or more years of teaching experience. The survey also asked faculty to focus their responses on their non-career development courses. The results were as follows:

Barriers

Through open-ended questions, faculty identified barriers to effectively incorporate career development into their courses. The top five barriers are summarized as follows:

  1. There is not enough time in the semester to teach course content and add a career component. Faculty cited competing curricular priorities (i.e., diversity, engaged learning, general education, academic content) and lack of time in their workday.
  2. What I teach does not have a direct connection to careers. Faculty commented that their course is lecture-based, and they were unsure how to incorporate CD into this format. They taught large introductory/general education topics with students from multiple majors. They were unsure how to connect their subject matter to career development tools.
  3. Career development does not belong in courses. Comments included the following:
    “It is up to the students to find/make time to focus on CD outside of class.”
    "This is not vocational school."
    “CD does not need to be offered in every class.”
  4. Lack of understanding of what career development entails or how career services can assist faculty. Example quotes are below.
    “No obvious career path in my discipline other than graduate school” 
    “Class has nothing to do with résumé building”
    “You guys just help students find jobs, right?”
  5. Lack of knowledge. Some respondents vulnerably acknowledged that they do not know how they can incorporate career development or where best to insert this material.
     

Faculty Recommendations

The last section of the survey asked faculty how they would like to be assisted as they integrated career development into their courses. Some faculty made suggestions that most career offices already provide assistance, including handouts specific to majors, presenting workshops to classes, a monthly career newsletter, and assigning a career staff liaison to departments as a resource. A few even outright stated that they do not need or want help. The top recommendations included faculty/staff training, resources to source speakers, and an activity bank (i.e., assignments that can be integrated into Canvas).

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Author Recommendations and Strategies

Based on the survey results, as well as current practices in both The College of Health and Human Development and The College of the Liberal Arts at Penn State, the career services professionals identified the following actions to initiate or current strategies to engage faculty with career development in the curriculum:

Conclusion

Understanding faculty perceptions and recognizing perceived barriers can help career development professionals thoughtfully strategize the best ways to collaborate with faculty and advocate for career development within the curriculum. This will allow faculty and career development professionals to meet on common ground, allowing for well-rounded career development services with student success and career readiness in mind. While many faculty believe in this goal, they also rate their confidence in achieving this in a range that indicates the necessity of career development professional assistance.

 

 

References

Eagan, K., Stolzenber, E. B., Ramierz, J. J., Aragon, M. C., Suchard, M. R., & Rios-Aguilar, C. (2016). The American freshman: Fifty-year trends, 1966-2015. Higher Education Research Institute, UCLA.

National Association of Colleges and Employers. (2022). NACE 2021-2022 career services benchmarks survey report. https://www.naceweb.org/store/2022/nace-career-services-benchmark-report

VanDerziel, S. (2022, November 8). The value of career services. National Association of Colleges and Employers. https://www.naceweb.org/career-development/organizational-structure/the-value-of-career-services/

 


Terry CumminsTerry Cummins is an Assistant Teaching Professor and Internship Director at the Department of Human Development and Family Studies at The Pennsylvania State University (World Campus). She holds a MEd in Counselor Education (with an emphasis in Career Counseling) from Penn State University and provides career counseling at Penn State Career Services (University Park). She co-led the inaugural NCDA Career Teaching Academy in 2022. She can be reached at tfs2@psu.edu

 

 

Lauren GraneseLauren Granese is the Assistant Director of the College of the Liberal Arts Career Enrichment Network at The Pennsylvania State University.  She holds a M.Ed. in Counselor Education, with an emphasis in Career Counseling, from Penn State, and is a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC). She provides career counseling and coaching for Liberal Arts and exploratory students at Penn State. She co-led the inaugural NCDA Career Teaching Academy in 2022. She can be reached at leg5147@psu.edu

 

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2 Comments

Paul Timmins   on Wednesday 11/01/2023 at 10:46 PM

This is so fascinating and useful -- great job!

Clemente Diaz   on Thursday 11/02/2023 at 08:44 PM

Thanks for your insights! A couple of years ago, I co-authored an article on the same topic. Below is the link to the article if you're interested.

https://ncda.org/"font-size:0.8em; line-height:1.2em;margin-top:10px">Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in the comments shown above are those of the individual comment authors and do not reflect the views or opinions of this organization.