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National University Graduates: Lagging behind in job market

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12:00 AM, May 11, 2019 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:01 AM, May 11, 2019
National University Graduates: Lagging behind in job market

Skills mismatch a key reason, WB study finds; experts for revamping curricula, training teachers

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Wasim Bin Habib

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Nayan Ahmed started searching for a job since his graduation in 2016. Every day, he browses through newspapers and online job portals for employment opportunities in public service and spends hours to ready himself.

A student of political science at Govt BL College in Khulna, Nayan did sit several recruitment tests for government jobs. But his cherished job remains elusive.

“I have given up hope of getting a government job. Now I have to get any job to support my family,” said a frustrated Nayan, who came to Dhaka three months ago from his Bagerhat home in search of a job.

His father retired from government service five years ago. Elder of two brothers, Nayan must now provide for his family.

Like him, thousands of students of government and non-government colleges affiliated with the National University (NU) lose the first few years after completing their graduation in search of jobs, often dubbed a “golden deer” in Bangladesh.

A World Bank study has found as high as 46 percent National University students remain unemployed for at least three years on completion of their graduation.

“This share is very high in any standard. Unemployment thus is a grave issue for graduates from NU-affiliated colleges and requires special attention,” said the study report released on March 31.

The study -- Graduate Employability of Affiliated Colleges: New Evidence from Bangladesh -- began in October 2016.

In Bangladesh, around 20 lakh job-seekers enter the labour market each year.

Currently, 1,862 colleges are affiliated with the NU and the number keeps rising every year.

More than 18 lakh students are currently enrolled in these colleges, which accounts for 68 percent of the total enrolment at higher education level, the study said, citing Bangladesh Bureau of Education Information and Statistics data.

In 2017, as many as 5.46 lakh students were studying in the final years of various academic programmes -- Degree Pass Course, Honours and Master’s -- with the NU.

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‘DISMAL PICTURE’
The study is based on interview with 2,350 graduates from NU-affiliated colleges, 235 employers of currently employed graduates, and principals and vice-principals of 35 government and non-government colleges.

It found that an unemployed graduate applied for 17 jobs since the start of unemployment before they could find a job.

On the other hand, about three in every four unemployed college graduates received at least one job offer that they declined mainly because of poor salary packages.

Overall, 66 percent male graduates remained unemployed against 77 percent of their female counterparts.

Unemployment rate is relatively lower in metropolitan areas, with the rural-urban ratio standing at 72:58.

Of those unemployed, highest 74 percent are from humanities group, followed by 69 percent from business discipline and 66 percent from science group.

“It’s a dismal picture,” said Prof Abdul Mannan, the immediate past chairman of the University Grants Commission.

“We don’t need certificate-oriented graduates. The man and his knowledge and skills behind the certificate are what is important,” he told The Daily Star.

BUT WHY?
“The key problem is skill mismatch,” said Zahid Hussain, lead economist at the WB’s Dhaka office.

The knowledge and skills that the graduates acquire in colleges have little application at work, which makes the National University-affiliated college education less relevant in the labour market.

“College graduates often lack relevant skills valued by employers. The core of the problem is on the supply side, reflected in the form of inadequacies of quality and weak relevance of education and skills of college graduates,” Zahid said.

In the study, more than half of the students surveyed said that they acquired “a lot of new skills and knowledge” through academic and off-campus activities.

But all of this have little use in workplace, which makes the NU college education less relevant in job market, the report said.

“This is disappointing as college education is supposed to teach new skills and improve the knowledge base of the students.”

It also found that only one-third of the employed graduates have been able to apply their knowledge and skills in their work usefully.

“College graduates failed to acquire practical knowledge and skills during their time of college study,” it said.

Prof Hafiz Md Hasan Babu, pro-vice chancellor of NU, acknowledged that the curricula of the National University and most other public universities did not reflect the requirements of job market.

“This is a big weakness of our university curricula,” he said.

Non-Sanghi patriots @UKBengali, @Homo Sapiens, @Bilal9
 
I wonder how come a super-developed economy cannot employ university graduates? Is not the reason lack of industrial plants and factories that create both blue collar and white collar jobs? Borrowing foreign money to build unnecessary fantasy projects do not necessarily create jobs. Without an industrial base BD will remain an economically hollow country.
 
I have no idea why this guy is so b*** h***. I know a few bihari Bangladeshi who are just like this guy. The similarities are almost a match.
 
I wonder how come a super-developed economy cannot employ university graduates? Is not the reason lack of industrial plants and factories that create both blue collar and white collar jobs? Borrowing foreign money to build unnecessary fantasy projects do not necessarily create jobs. Without an industrial base BD will remain an economically hollow country.

Didn’t you yourself answered the question by yourself in other thread that you created? What’s point of asking similar questions like these?
 
Didn’t you yourself answered the question by yourself in other thread that you created? What’s point of asking similar questions like these?
Answer the question raised in the news if you can and do not focus so much on fantasy projects. GDP growth on paper is not exactly national development. Learn this basic point and focus more on industrialization since that GDP growth itself is being questioned. Industrialize the country to employ the new graduates. Very simple. But, you guys emphasize on non-productive sectors that can wait for a few years.

You guys are not ashamed when data are falsified but then deny it when it comes out to the open.
 

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