Graduate unemployment has fallen for a second
year |
Media
studies students - sometimes stereotyped as studying "Mickey Mouse"
degrees - are among the most employable of any graduates, says a
major survey.
The latest "What Do Graduates Do?" survey of over 200,000
ex-students reveals that media graduates have among the highest
employment rates.
The survey shows that graduate unemployment has fallen for the
second year running.
But an increasing number of college leavers have taken
"non-graduate" jobs.
With the forthcoming increases in tuition fees, there have been
debates about the value of degrees - and whether students will
achieve a return on their investment.
Best prospects
Mike Hill, chief executive of the Higher Education Careers
Services Unit, which publishes the report, described the findings as
"good news for graduates and the economy" and highlighted a
strengthening jobs market for IT graduates.
The latest figures, based on those leaving university in 2004,
show that graduate unemployment has fallen by 0.5% to 6.1% - with
the "best immediate employment prospects" being for former students
of marketing, media studies and civil engineering.
Six months after leaving university, an average of 63% of
students from all courses are in employment - while for media
studies the figure is 71%. Many of those who are not in work are
pursuing further studies - such as law graduates (only about a third
are working six months after graduation).
Among graduates with media or "culture" degrees, only about one
in five went into jobs directly related to their studies.
This pattern is similar to other courses, with a majority of
students not beginning work within employment areas directly related
to their degrees. For instance, only about 14% of psychology and
sociology graduates went into jobs categorised as "social and
welfare professions".
The longer-term lowest unemployment rates are for those
graduating in architecture, law and civil engineering.
This year's group of university leavers faces a slightly
improving jobs market - but graduate unemployment still remains
higher than in the mid-1990s.
Health workers
The biggest sector for these recent graduates is health -
employing about one in eight graduates six months after leaving
university.
There were also increases in the number of graduates going into
marketing, sales and advertising, IT, business and finance.
In contrast, the proportion of graduates entering "science
professions" fell from 1.2% to 1.1%.
A year after graduation, the survey says that 12.3% of graduates
are working in "clerical and secretarial" occupations - an increase
of 1 percentage point.
Mr Hill says that interpretations of this category as
"non-graduate" can be misleading - as more than three-quarters of
these students go on to use these entry-level jobs as springboards
to graduate jobs.
"What is particularly gratifying is that despite more graduates
looking for jobs each year, businesses seemingly cannot get enough
of them," said Mr Hill