Studies examining student perceptions of employability skill development in business undergraduate programs are limited. Assurance of student buy-in is important to ensure learners engage with skill provision; to enable them to articulate their capabilities to potential employers and to facilitate the transfer of acquired skills. This study examines 1019 students' perceptions of the importance of employability skill development, the relative importance of skills and the influence of certain demographic/background characteristics. Findings indicate undergraduates value skill development, most particularly communication and team-working, and some significant variations in importance ratings. Alignment with other stakeholder perceptions and the influence of context are discussed.
KEYWORDSBusiness, employability, undergraduate, competency, generic skills 2 | P a g e There is broad consensus of the value in developing certain skills in business undergraduates as a means of enhancing their employability profile. These employability skills are sometimes referred to as professional, core, generic, key, and non-technical skills and are inherent to enhancing graduate work-readiness (Yorke & Knight, 2004). Employability skills typically considered important in developed economies are team working, communication, self-management, and analysis and critical thinking (Business, Industry and Higher Education Collaboration Council (BIHECC), 2007; Lowden, Hall, Elliot & Lewin, 2011). Governments and employers across developed economies increasingly call for higher education providers to prepare graduates for the workplace (Confederation of British Industry (CBI), 2010; Wilton, 2011). Universities have duly responded with considerable efforts on clarifying which employability skills are most required in undergraduates and, more recently, identifying ways of successfully embedding, developing, and assessing these skills in higher education.Despite widespread initiatives in employability skill provision in higher education, gaps between graduate workplace performance and employer expectations continue to persist (BIHECC, 2007;Helyer, 2011). Evidence in developed economies suggests employer expectations of business graduates are not being met, particularly in critical thinking, decision making, conflict resolution, leadership, and meta-cognitive skills. There is, however, some evidence of strong performance in working effectively with others, social responsibility, initiative, and confidence (see Jackson & Chapman, 2012).Importantly, graduate employability is multi-faceted and encompasses academic performance, career management skills, and labour market awareness (Rothwell & Arnold, 2007), in addition to workplace learning (Billet, 2011), and personality theory (Rae, 2007). Skill development in higher education is, however, considered a significant contributor to employability. It features prominently in models attempting to decipher and delineate the precise meaning of graduate employability. Dacre-Pool and Sewell's (2007) m...