The link between working life and education was strengthened in a three-year project
âAccording to research, graduates feel that they arenât prepared enough for work-life during their studies. Academia-industry collaboration, joint projects, internships and other periods in working life may improve graduatesâ work-life capabilities and transition to working life,â says WORKPEDA Project coordinator Jouni Helin.
In 2018, the Ministry of Education and Culture founded the to respond to the challenges mentioned above. Professor PÀivi TynjÀlÀ from the University of JyvÀskylÀ managed the project which covered ten universities and six universities of applied sciences.
Work-integrated pedagogy in this context stands for practices, approaches and pedagogical methods or models with either work-life collaboration or which aims to improve work-life capacities within substance teaching or through separate studies.
The objectives of the WORKPEDA project have been to
- Renew the operational culture of higher education institutions so that work-integrated pedagogy and academia-industry collaboration are a natural part of higher education
- Strengthen the linkage between research, development and innovation (RDI) activities and education
- Create lasting operating models for work-integrated pedagogical support and guidance
- Strengthen studentsâ work readiness and accelerate the transition to working life
- Develop university personnel capacities in work-life collaboration and pedagogy and
- Deepen the cooperation between universities and other higher education institutes
Jouni Helin, Project coordinatorAccording to research, graduates feel that they arenât prepared enough for work-life during their studies.
Collaboration projects prepare students for working life
Laura Sivula, Niina PitkĂ€nen and Silva Saulio from Aalto University developed a Masterâs thesis collaboration model called Aalto Thesis during the WORKPEDA project. In Aalto Thesis, a partner organisation presents a challenge to a multidisciplinary student team to tackle through their Masterâs theses. Aalto University coordinates the collaboration project, and the students receive a grant. So far, Aalto Thesis partner organisations have been the Foundation for Student Housing in the Helsinki Region (Hoas), Digital and Population Data Services Agency, the city of Espoo, Valio and the municipality of Sipoo.
Based on the student response and participant feedback, Aalto Thesis seems to be an exciting possibility to enhance and integrate future work-life skills and connections to their degrees. Nearly 500 students have signed up for the Aalto Thesis mailing list to hear about the upcoming projects. In the 2020 feedback surveys, the students replied to the statement âI would recommend participation in Aalto Thesisâ with an average of 4,82, and the statement âI will benefit from the things I learned during Aalto Thesisâ received an average of 4,73. The survey was in a five-point Likert scale format (1 = strongly disagree, 5 = strongly agree).
In the WORKPEDA final seminarâs panel discussion, student Riina Ruus-Prato from the Creative Sustainability in Design programme shared her experiences in the Aalto Thesis project. Riina Ruus-Prato participated in a collaboration project with the municipality of Sipoo.
âDuring my studies, I have been stressed about what to do after graduation. The Aalto Thesis project has been a good addition to the collaboration between working life and education. I feel that the project prepared me well for the transition to working life, and it was nice to do a thesis with real value.â
Riina Ruus-Prato, studentThe Aalto Thesis project has been a good addition to the collaboration between working life and education.
Concrete outputs to support education
The WORKPEDA project included five work packages. Aalto University was part of the package Working-life perspective in curriculaâs section Work-integrated, enhanced process for graduation theses. The other work packages focused on strengthening the working-life competences of students, support and guidance in work-integrated pedagogy, and RDI activities as part of education.
The final project output was a book TyöelĂ€mĂ€pedagogiikka korkeakoulutuksessa (edited by Anne Virtanen, Jouni Helin and PĂ€ivi TynjĂ€lĂ€). You can download the pdf version at the end of the article. The book is available only in Finnish, but some chapters are in English. The book is about the projectâs pilots and the results of integrating working life perspectives in education. Aalto Thesis is presented in the chapter 4.3.2 Monitieteinen ja projektipohjainen opinnĂ€ytetyöohjelma â LisĂ€arvoa opiskelijoille ja partneriorganisaatioille.
The University of Oulu and Aalto University collaborated as part of the WORKPEDA project to create a digital student guide to project-based Masterâs thesis process and multidisciplinary teamwork. Aalto Thesis Student Guide is a practical guide where both students and other education practitioners can find tips and academic sources.
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