TY - JOUR
T1 - Mentoring for employability
T2 - a state-level impact study
AU - Jackson, Claire
AU - Milos, Dani
AU - Kerr, Monica
PY - 2019/9/18
Y1 - 2019/9/18
N2 - PurposeIndustry mentoring has been repeatedly called out in sector reports on research training in Australian Universities as an effective way to develop PhD capacity and capabilities during research degrees (ACOLA, 2016; NOUS, 2017). Despite the understood importance of this type of experiential development,there is little published evidence on how effective mentoring is to develop the capabilities linked to improved employability. The University of South Australia developed the industry mentoring network in STEM (IMNIS) Impact Evaluation Instrument (IIEI) to capture advanced self-assessed data from mentees and demonstrate what impact the IMNIS program has on developing industry-relevant knowledge and skills in PhD participants. In 2017, the three universities in South Australia implemented a state-wide study using the IIEI to understand the impact of the national IMNIS scheme on the South Australian cohort.Design/methodology/approachThis paper presents a case study on the impact of mentoring on PhD students during the IMNIS program. A self-assessed, competency-based study design has been used to collect pre, mid and post experience data, which measures the extent to which objectives of the IMNIS program are met. The evaluation of the results, using the Vitae Impact Framework (Vitae, 2012), seeks to understand the development of mentees’s kills and knowledge as a result of their mentoring experience to support program development and build an evidence base of impact.FindingsThis paper presents the 2017/2018 results from the South Australian IMNIS impact evaluation.Through analysis of the three data sets,findings show that skills and knowledge have been developed in mentees as a result of the program.Originality/valueThis study provides an extended approach to the existing evaluation undertaken in the national IMNIS program. The IIEI is now available for other universities to use as a method for extended evaluation of their IMNIS program or potentially other WIL opportunities, providing an opportunity for institutional and national benchmarking
AB - PurposeIndustry mentoring has been repeatedly called out in sector reports on research training in Australian Universities as an effective way to develop PhD capacity and capabilities during research degrees (ACOLA, 2016; NOUS, 2017). Despite the understood importance of this type of experiential development,there is little published evidence on how effective mentoring is to develop the capabilities linked to improved employability. The University of South Australia developed the industry mentoring network in STEM (IMNIS) Impact Evaluation Instrument (IIEI) to capture advanced self-assessed data from mentees and demonstrate what impact the IMNIS program has on developing industry-relevant knowledge and skills in PhD participants. In 2017, the three universities in South Australia implemented a state-wide study using the IIEI to understand the impact of the national IMNIS scheme on the South Australian cohort.Design/methodology/approachThis paper presents a case study on the impact of mentoring on PhD students during the IMNIS program. A self-assessed, competency-based study design has been used to collect pre, mid and post experience data, which measures the extent to which objectives of the IMNIS program are met. The evaluation of the results, using the Vitae Impact Framework (Vitae, 2012), seeks to understand the development of mentees’s kills and knowledge as a result of their mentoring experience to support program development and build an evidence base of impact.FindingsThis paper presents the 2017/2018 results from the South Australian IMNIS impact evaluation.Through analysis of the three data sets,findings show that skills and knowledge have been developed in mentees as a result of the program.Originality/valueThis study provides an extended approach to the existing evaluation undertaken in the national IMNIS program. The IIEI is now available for other universities to use as a method for extended evaluation of their IMNIS program or potentially other WIL opportunities, providing an opportunity for institutional and national benchmarking
KW - skills development
KW - researche development
KW - PhD experience
KW - industry engagament
KW - PhD employability
KW - PhD mentoring
KW - Skills development
KW - Researcher development
KW - Industry engagement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85071326869&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/SGPE-04-2019-0047
DO - 10.1108/SGPE-04-2019-0047
M3 - Article
SN - 2398-4686
VL - 10
SP - 180
EP - 188
JO - Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education
JF - Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education
IS - 3
ER -