Section I – Definitions.- 1. Introduction; Diver.- 2. Higher Education and Civil Society: What Contribution Can Universities Make to Civil Society?; Ceryn Evans, Stuart Fox, Chris Taylor.- 3. Learning Gain: Can It Be Measured?; Peter Gossman, Stephen Powell.- 4. Conceptions of Quality: Some critical reflections on the impact of ‘quality’ on academic practice; Chris Lawton.- 5. What Motivational Processes Underpin Student Engagement with Employability? A Critical Review ; Andrew James Clements.- 6. Developing Employable, Emotionally Intelligent And Resilient Graduate Citizens Of The Future; Lorraine Dacre Pool, Dawne Gurbutt and Kath Houston.- 7. The Role Of ‘Learner Identity’ And Experience-Related Beliefs In Developing Desirable Graduate Attributes; Dawne Irving-Bell.- 8. Pushing water uphill? The challenges of non-engagement; Vicki Louise O’Brien, and Francesca Dominique Walker-Martin.- 9. Student Motivation and drop-out rates in Brazil; Dalton Cusciano, Mauro MaiaLaruccia, Luis Fernando Salles Moraes.- 10. Building student resilience for graduate work-readiness; Jacinta Ryan, Sandra Jones, Peter Hayes and Michelle Turner.- 11. “That Working-Class Ethic … Where There’s A Will There’s A Way”: A Strengths-Based Approach To Developing Employable Scholars; Sarah O’Shea and Janine Delahunty.-
Section II – Designs and Difficulties.- 12. Precursors to Employability: How first year undergraduate students plan and strategize to become employable graduates; Emma Mullen; Stephanie Bridges; Sara Eccles; Doris Dippold.- 13. Engaging students, staff, and employers in developing student employability; John Bostock.- 14. Learning from and about each other: developing skills for a connected interdisciplinary world; Dawne Gurbutt.- 15. What happens when politics and career dreams collide? Considering the impact of Brexit on graduate career aspirations; Theresa Thomson.- 16. Assessment strategy: enhancement of student learning through a programme focus?; Ruth Whitfield, Peter Hartley.- 17. Authentic assessment as a tool to bridge the transition between learning and work; Robyn Davidson, Catherine Snelling, Sophie Karanicolas, Tania Crotti, Braden Phillips.- 18. ‘Oh, the places you’ll go’: The importance of relationships on postgraduate research students’ experiences of academia; Janine Delahunty and Kathryn Harden-Thew.- 19. Making Student Internships Work: Navigating Stakeholder Interests and Aspirations at the University-Work Interface; Martha Caddell & Rosemarie McIlwhan.- 20. Curiosity and Self-Connected Learning: Re-centring the ‘I’ in technologically assisted learning; Sally Goldspink and Hilary Engward.- 21. Student Engagement with LinkedIn to Enhance Employability; Emmanuel Mogaji.- 22. Pre-professional identity formation through connections with alumni and the use of LinkedIn; Julie Fowlie and Clare Forder.-
Section III – Disciplines.- 23. Developing The ‘Oven-Ready’ Postgraduate: Squeezing A Quart Into A PintPot To Meet The Employability Agenda; Gillian Forster and Andrew Robson.- 24. Constructing Careers: Self-Awareness, Self-Reflection, And Self-Efficacy Amongst Undergraduate Business Students; Deborah A. Lock.- 25. Hitting the Ground Running: Group Simulations within Business School Cohorts; David M Brown, Ian Charity and Andrew Robson.- 26. Pop-up shops in the curriculum: increasing employability (and contributing to civil society) in times of austerity; Inge Hill and Tina Bass.- 27. Professional Development within second year computing degree programmes; Janice Whatley.- 28. ‘Using the Living CV to help students take ownership of their learning gain’; Lisa Dibben and Dawn Morley.- 29. Using an e-portfolio to demonstrate graduate-ness and employability during post-graduate distance education; C.J. van Staden.- 30. Online Education and Distance Learning: A socio-constructivist approach; Kelli Bippert.- 31. Building Career Readiness for Criminal Law Practice: The Adelaide Law School Experience; Kellie Toole.- 32. Leading the way: A case study of establishing an employability scheme at Coventry Law School; Harriet Lodge and Susie Elliott.- 33. Increasing Employability beyond Getting a Job: Engaging Criminal Justice Students in their own Professional Development; Ester Ragonese and Steven Altham.- 34. Quiet Silencing: Restricting the Criminological Imagination in the Neoliberal University; Alana Barton, Howard Davis, and David Scott.- 35. Conclusion.