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Thanks for your comments, Paul. The whole nature of career education, as you state, involves working with nontraditional adult learners who may sometimes need an extra nudge. I am convinced that if we lead by example and show immediate relevance to the knowledge and applications they are learning, we have tapped motivation.

Jay Hollowell, MaxKnowledge
Guest Facilitator

Hello Sarah,

I agree with many of the posts for this thread. Knowing a student's motivation starts with the initial interview. Being able to keep that motivation alive requires both internal and external support. If the student is intrinsically motivated to finish and find a job then it's best to eliminate as many obstacles as possible. Extrinsically motivated students need more praise and support in addition to making the process of admissions to graduation to placement possible. Establish a feeling of purpose in the student that drives them to the finish line. This can be accomplished by learning their goals, understanding their need to succeed, and identifying their core values.

You make some great points about motivation. They made us think that probably there are not a lot of notes about the motivation of each student. There's certainly no place on a student record or file! So how do faculty and staff rate a student's motivation and how does this get recorded? And then what is done with the low rated student and how is the highly motivated student treated? Certainly food for thought on what services to offer each type. Thanks, Susan

One additional question - many of our graduates are employed but refuse to send us documentation about their employer or any details that we need to comply with accreditation requirements. Any tips ?

Interesting situation, Milo. The first thought we have is - what are you asking your grads and when? And also what involvement did your school have in assisting in getting the job? Perhaps the school needs to have more involvement in the job preparation and job search process. As part of the assistance let the students know that it is expected that they will continue to communicate with you after they get a job and that you need to know placement results and details as the information needs to be reported to your regulatory authorities. Be sure to reenforce that their privacy will be maintained. Again, you might want to start by looking at the questions you ask now. What is it about the questions that might make the grads balk about responding? Thanks, Susan

Hi Milo! This is certainly an ongoing challenge for career services. In addition to stressing to graduates and students the importance of communicating that information, I think the key rests in relationships. We have to make them want to tell us. Here are some tips (many of which you may already use):

-involve career services early on with students so that by the time they get to graduation, they have built a solid, professional relationship with career services reps, not just assistance toward the end of the program
-ask faculty members for information; in many instances, instructors stay in touch with students and graduates, and know where they are working
-see if financial aid has contact information if you cannot currently locate a graduate to ask them about employment

Jay Hollowell
Guest
MaxKnowledge

Hi Jay, Great list of career services activities and tips. Susan

Placement services should be required for all schools. Students need help thats why they are looking for a school because they arent able to do it alone.

kelly,

Very true, Kelly. Students enroll in career schools because they want a job. That's why we feel that career services staff should meet the prospective student when admissions is conducting the interview. Some students think they don't need employment training. The reality is that everyone needs to learn the skills or get an update. We feel it is the responsibility of the school to provide the tools for grads to successfully find employment. Thanks, Susan

Dr. Susan Schulz

Paul,
Thank you for stating what I was thinking. However challenging the task may seem, it is not 100% placement that schools are held accountable for this reason. Exceptions will apply. Having programs in place that focus on providing resources to students leading up to the time for their job search is indeed extremely important and achieveable.

Aaron Meadows

Aaron,
Interesting comments. We believe that schools should only enroll students with the goal of seeing that each grad gets a job in the field trained for which trained This takes as much training as knowledge and skills needed for the job! We believe that students need training in searching for jobs, being prepared for that first job interview, interview coaching, confidence building and lots more. It usually takes several months. Thanks, Susan

Dr. Susan Schulz

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