3.8 Article

Transnational cooperation in enhancing researchers' wider employability: the TRANSPEER project

Journal

STUDIES IN GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL EDUCATION
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 19-25

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/SGPE-12-2021-0083

Keywords

Skills awareness; Researcher development; Wider employability; Transnational added-value

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This paper provides an example of best practice in enhancing employability for doctorate-holders in the cross-sectoral labour market. A transnational skills development project was conducted, involving researchers from different universities and career stages. The findings indicate that transnational collaboration enhances the learning environment for researchers and provides significant professional development opportunities for both researchers and research support staff.
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to provide an example of best practice towards enhancing employability in the cross-sectoral labour market for doctorate-holders. This was achieved through an Erasmus+ KA2 (Strategic Partnership) skills development project which created a training programme (TRANSPEER) involving a multi-disciplinary cohort of researchers at a range of career stages, drawn from universities in Norway, Portugal, Sweden and the UK. Design/methodology/approach Research support staff designed and delivered four transnational training events for the cohort, with the overarching theme of enhancing researcher employability. An initial skills awareness survey of the researcher cohort was undertaken prior to the start of the programme; this survey was repeated after each event. An additional aim of the project was the development of the consortium's research support staff through exposure to the facilitation techniques and methodologies of their international colleagues. Findings The findings indicate that transnational collaboration in researcher development enhances the learning environment for participating researchers and provides significant professional development opportunities for both researchers and researcher developers. The findings further suggest the benefits of mixing cohorts across career stages and engaging researchers with novel and interactive approaches on themes not typically addressed in academic competence development offerings. Originality/value Transversal skills development cooperation between universities - especially transnational cooperation - is rare. Even more so is the professional development of research support staff in a transnational context. This paper outlines the benefits of such collaborative activities.

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