Employment of Vocational Graduates: Still a Slough or Already a Ford?

  • Fedor Dudyrev HSE University
  • Olga Romanova HSE University
  • Pavel Travkin HSE University
Keywords: labor market, combining work and study, vocational education and training, study-to-work transition, starting salary

Abstract

The study is devoted to employment of recent vocational graduates. The pro­portion of middle-school graduates in vocational enrollment has increased es­sentially over the past decade, which indicates that the choice of vocational trajectories, on average, is now made at lower age. It was established based on the Monitoring of Education Markets and Organizations that on average 44 percent of students combined work and study in 2010–2015. Vocational students mostly combine and work and study because of financial constraints, their study-work rarely being related to their major. Later on, when making a transition from education to the labor market, vocational graduates have to ac­cept one of the first job offers as they cannot afford a longer job search. The second part of the study draws upon the findings from the 2010–2015 sam­pling survey of graduate employment administered by the Federal State Statistics Service (Rosstat). It is shown that combining work and study has posi­tive effects on employability of graduates as well as on the size of their starting salaries. In addition, self-funded students and those who combine study with major-related work are more likely to get employed in their field of study af­ter graduation. Education-job mismatch among graduates is found to entail income “penalties”.

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Published
2019-03-21
How to Cite
Dudyrev, Fedor, Olga Romanova, and Pavel Travkin. 2019. “Employment of Vocational Graduates: Still a Slough or Already a Ford?”. Voprosy Obrazovaniya / Educational Studies Moscow, no. 1 (March), 109-36. https://doi.org/10.17323/1814-9545-2019-1-109-136.
Section
Theoretical and Applied Research