糖心Vlog

France adds employability to the university mission

The government wants academics to聽do more to help get young people into work

Published on
January 23, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Alamy

Ready to work? Corporate leaders complain that university courses place too much emphasis on narrow academic knowledge and too little on its relevance to the real world

The French Ministry of 糖心Vlog and Research is trying to bridge the gap between universities and the corporate world. But its latest venture, an advisory group on curriculum reform headed by business leaders, is rubbing some academics up the wrong way.

鈥淲e cannot stand by and watch our youth fall victim to the economic crisis,鈥 says Fran莽oise Gri, co-president of the advisory group, Sup鈥橢mploi, and chief executive of the tourism firm Pierre et Vacances. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a national challenge: France can emerge from the fray of global competition thanks to the skills and qualifications of its people.鈥

Sup鈥橢mploi, which features representatives from higher education and business, was created in December 2013 to work on guidelines to help universities adapt to the needs of a changing economy.

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France鈥檚 Socialist government is battling to create jobs for the country鈥檚 young people amid fears that the eurozone鈥檚 second largest economy is sliding into recession. This year, youth unemployment peaked at 26.1聽per cent 鈥 nowhere near as bad as Spain鈥檚 56.1聽per cent youth unemployment rate but still higher than the UK鈥檚 20.9聽per cent 鈥 according to the latest Eurostat figures.

The government is rolling out a state-subsidised jobs scheme to get businesses hiring young job-seekers, but it is also turning to the country鈥檚 academics to better equip students for the world of work when they leave universities.

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鈥淲e have to anticipate the changing business needs and not always play catch-up; that鈥檚 why we have to work together with French companies,鈥 the minister for higher education, Genevi猫ve Fioraso, said in December.

鈥楲agging behind鈥

Gri complains that French universities have failed to anticipate how the digital revolution has changed the economy. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know where to recruit. There isn鈥檛 a tourism course in France that trains students in e鈥慶ommerce. We are lagging behind,鈥 she says.

French employers also grumble that university graduates do not acquire skills that are transferable to the workplace. They say that candidates lack vital soft skills, such as IT qualifications, knowledge of English and presentation or project management skills.

鈥淚n the US and the UK, students are taught to work on projects together,鈥 Gri says, 鈥渂ut in France, students work alone. They attend classes in large amphitheatres and are rarely involved in group projects, especially in humanities.

鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to address this issue, but it does require some organisation, some new ways of working together.鈥

Another common complaint from corporate leaders is that university courses place too much emphasis on narrow academic knowledge and too little on its real-world relevance.

Yves Lecointe, a lecturer in engineering at and a former president of the University of Nantes, shares this concern. 鈥淐ourses should not cater only for students who want to go into teaching,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat about the others? We can no longer afford to sacrifice the large majority of students who want to pursue other careers.鈥

Lecointe cautions that university officials should not focus solely on the short-term goal of improving graduate employability but rather introduce classes that open up new perspectives for students. One of his suggestions is to give students on technical courses additional classes in law or sustainable development.

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French tourism office

Time for a transformation

The Ministry of 糖心Vlog and Research would like to change French universities in more fundamental ways as well. 鈥淲e ranked sixth in the world for the quality of our scientific publications, and yet we are between 20th and 25th for innovation,鈥 Fioraso told the business daily Les Echos last month. 鈥淲e struggle to transform inventions in our labs into innovations that will create jobs.鈥

But closing the gap between the realms of academia and business is no small task: relations between France鈥檚 universities and corporate world are at best cordial, often non-existent and sometimes downright hostile.

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鈥淭he real problem is that most company leaders have a pathological mistrust of universities,鈥 says Marc Neveu, who teaches IT at the University of Burgundy in Dijon and is co-head of the higher education trade union Syndicat National de l鈥橢nseignement Sup茅rieur (Snesup). 鈥淭hey all come from engineering schools and think that students are lazy and dilettantes.鈥

France鈥檚 higher education system is split into two tiers. The elite grandes 茅coles train engineers, scientists and business leaders, while universities shape the minds of the country鈥檚 researchers.

Neveu believes that UK and German businesses have more trust in those who study and work in universities and are keen to hire candidates with PhDs.

鈥淚n Germany and in the UK, most of the employees in R&D have PhDs; here it鈥檚 less than half,鈥 he laments.鈥淚f we want to foster innovation, we have to rely on our PhD students; it鈥檚 absurd not to.鈥

Many corporate leaders admit that they ignore of the world of academia and tend to recruit from the cohorts of the grandes 茅coles. But they also argue that universities fail to direct employers towards graduates who might fulfil their needs.

Sup鈥橢mploi hopes to foster links between these two worlds. But it is unclear how many academics will take its recommendations to heart.

According to Neveu, the committee gives too much power to company leaders. As a consequence, he believes, its recommendations will narrow perspectives for students rather than open new horizons.

鈥淭hey will privilege courses that fulfil specific needs in the market instead of encouraging wide-ranging courses that teach our students to become citizens, to acquire humanist values,鈥 Neveu says.鈥淚f university courses are too targeted, they will prevent students from moving towards new courses, new jobs.鈥

Sup鈥橢mploi also aims to encourage the growth of stages en alternance (in which students undertake work placements along with their studies) to strengthen links between universities and businesses.

The government hopes to increase the number of participants in such programmes in secondary and tertiary education to 500,000 by 2017. The most recent figures available, those for 2011, show that 426,000 students were involved that year. Of those participants, 14聽per cent were enrolled in higher education, compared with just 3聽per cent 15 years earlier.

But although universities are offering more and more stages en alternance, the figures hide great disparities, according to Gri.

鈥淯niversities such as [Paris-Est] Marne-la-Vall茅e run some great apprenticeships, but sadly other universities aren鈥檛 so committed,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a shame because the figures show that the more contacts a student has with companies, the greater chance he has of finding a job.鈥

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The committee is expected to release its first recommendations in the spring.

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