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XIII ALMALAUREA SURVEY ON GRADUATES PROFILE
Go to the online documentation!
AlmaLaurea: more than 1,580,000 CVs!
More than 1,580,000-year-long work experience made in Italy or abroad.
Prodi: "AlmaLaurea is a treasure for everyone"
The former Prime Minister of Italy, the Rector of the University of Bologna Ivano Dionigi and Lino Cardarelli (Union for the Mediterranean) support the AlmaLaurea databank and its enlargement. Watch the video
Cooperate to govern
The future of the University in Europe through the words of Kolja Briedis, researcher at the Institut für Hochschulforschung, Hochschul Informations System HIS, Hannover, Germany.
"AlmaLaurea in Maghreb and in the Middle East"
Ilan Chet, Union for the Mediterranean, speaks on the future of the Consortium in Europe and beyond
"AlmaLaurea: an arrow to the bow of Europe"
Interview with Jean-Louis Guigou, Delegate General, Institut de Prospective Economique du Monde Méditerranéen – IPEMED
More education, less inequality
"AlmaLaurea is a model all Middle East countries should benefit of as it helps reducing inequality". Interview with Malak Reda.
"With a degree is better"
Interview with Francis Green, professor at the Institute of Education, University of London. "AlmaLaurea is a powerful tool"
“Italy: a model to be followed”
"AlmaLaurea, an important tool for cooperation." Interview with Antoine Zahlan, International Science Policy Consultant from Lebanon
The Euro Mediterraneo future: there is AlmaLaurea too.
AlmaLaurea, education, labour market and the Arab Spring. Interview with Gerard Mayen, researcher of the European Training Foundation
13th AlmaLaurea survey on graduates' employment condition.
Read the online documentation, presented in Bologna on March 10th/11th, 2011
Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna and AlmaLaurea presented
International Conference
Human Capital and Employment in the European and Mediterranean Area. Programme | Press release | Videos
From AlmaLaurea to France
Interview with Julien Calmand of the Céreq -Centre d'études et de recherche sur les qualifications- established in Marseille.
The European Higher Education Area exists
Interview with Sophia Eriksson Waterschoot, Head of Sector for Higher Education Policy in the European Commission's Directorate-General for Education and Culture, on the benefits of the Bologna process, and future challenges
"The future of Europe is in our minds"
Interview with Doris Pack, Chairwoman of the European Parliament’s Committee on Culture and Education on the future of the European Higher Education Area
"A building block for the world of training"
A cooperation of the European countries and of the Mediterranean area aimed at development, starting from university. An interview with Michèle Gendreau-Massaloux
The graduates’ databank in Morocco
Interview with Zaher Benabdallah, president of the University of Meknes: “AlmaLaurea is a very important step to keep up with the European policies on education”
Helping companies to hire graduates
Silvano Moffa, president of the Labour Commission of the Italian Chamber of Deputies, has expressed support for the proposal submitted to the Italian Parliament. "AlmaLaurea is an instrument that cannot be relinquished".
"Extending the AlmaLaurea model across Europe"
Interview with Leonardo Sforza, director of the European Club for Human Ressources: "Upgrading human resources is essential for the competitiveness of the company"
University reform: a new change
Fewer exams and a more definite transition from 1st level to 2nd level degrees. “But students should carefully plan their path of studies”. Here there are the opinions and advices given by the Pro-Rectors for Didactics of the universities of Bologna, Florence and Padua.
The impact of AlmaLaurea on University-to-Work Transition
A study carried out by M.F Bagues and M. Sylos Labini, presented at the National Bureau of Economic Research, shows the advantages of AlmaLaurea for graduates.

 

Home > Universities > Other Reports and Studies > After the “Bologna Process“ reform.

Graduates’ employment and employability after the “Bologna Process“ reform.
Evidence from the Italian experience and methodological issues

Prepared for the: International Conference - DECOWE
Development of Competencies in the World of Work and Education
24-26 September 2009, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia


Gilberto Antonelli, Furio Camillo, Andrea Cammelli, Angelo di Francia, Silvia Ghiselli, Matteo Sgarzi.
Università degli Studi di Bologna – Consorzio Interuniversitario ALMALAUREA

In a phase of depression and systemic crisis investments are essential assets in organizing the recovery, and the more so when innovation is relevant. This is why universities, companies, households and graduates implement strategies for overcoming the present crisis, leading to structural changes and competition both at the local and international level.
In this framework, tracer studies on graduates transition to the labour markets provides fundamental insights and information not only to the organizations responsible for their training, but also to the economic system as a whole. Moreover, any such study is all the more useful when it can draw upon reliable and up-to-date information.
This paper emphasizes three main points.
First we present the results achieved by the AL model in tracing the transition path of graduates from the time they enrolled at the university until a few years after earning the degree. The survey is carried out every year by the AL and makes it possible to analyze the most recent labour market trends through the scrutiny of the career opportunities available for the graduates after 1, 3 and 5 years on from graduation. More specifically, we will present the results of the 2008 survey. This survey involved also all first and second level graduates from the 2007 vintage.
Second, we examine the revision in our survey method, adopted in order to face the need to monitor a much higher number of post-reform graduates (more than 140 thousand overall) and the call of the Ministry and the universities to keep the information as much detailed as possible in assessing the employment outcomes for each single degree course, without losing feasibility in terms of costs and data collection time. In fact, we resorted to a mixed method: the computer assisted web interviewing (CAWI) and the computer assisted telephone interviewing (CATI). This is why it became necessary to measure and assess the effect of this approach on the answers given by interviewed graduates.
In third place, we outline the results of some preliminary experiments carried on in order to allow for specific and recurrent comparisons between the results achieved with the AL model and other similar models dealing with the employment conditions of Italian graduates.



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