TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Pages
Title Page ……………….…………………………………………… i
Table of Contents
……………………………………………………. ii
List of
Figures………………………………………………………... iv
CHAPTER
ONE…………………………………………………… 1
INTRODUCTION…………………………………………………... 1
Background to the
Study……………………………………………… 1
Statement of the
Problem……………………………………………… 7
Purpose of the
Study………………………………………………….. 7
Research
Questions………………………………………………….... 9
Research
Hypotheses…………………………………………………. 9
Significance of the
Study……………………………………………… 10
Scope of the
Study………………………..…………………………… 12
Operational Definition
of Terms……………………………………… 14
CHAPTER
TWO…………………………………………………….. 15
REVIEW
OF RELATED LITERATURE…………………………. 15
University Education
and Its Mandate …………….............................. 16
Theoretical
Framework……………………………………………….. 20
Concept of Labour Market
Demand…………………………………… 23
Sources of Labour
Demand in Nigeria………………………………… 31
Concept of Graduate
Employability………………………………….... 38
Employability
Skills…………………………………………………… 47
Empirical
Studies………………………………………………………. 55
Conceptual
Framework………………………………………………… 63
Appraisal of Literature
Reviewed……………………………………… 64
CHAPTER
THREE…………………………………………………... 67
RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY…………………………………… 67
Research
Design………………………………………………………. 67
Population, Sample and
Sampling Techniques………...……………... 68
Instrumentation………………………………………………………..
70
Procedure for Data
Collection………………………………………... 70
Data Analysis
Techniques……………………………………………. 71
REFERENCES………………………………………………………
73
APPENDIX
I …………………………………..……………….…… 84
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1: Conceptual
Model of Labour Market Demand and University Graduate Employability Skills …………………..……………..……………………..
63
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background to the Study
Education
is a means of empowerment to an individual and the society. Also, it is a
strong weapon for developing human capacity needed for a sustainable national
development. Tertiary education, which comprises universities, polytechnics,
colleges of education and mono technics, has been identified as a means of
developing human capacity required for sustainable national growth and
development. Specifically, universities are saddled with the responsibility of
developing high-level manpower within the context of the needs of the nation.
Following the globalisation, information technology and revolution in the
present day knowledge-based economy, so much expectation has been placed on
universities in generating, harnessing and transmitting knowledge for
sustainable development and improved standard of living. Therefore, the
university plays a crucial role in generating the human capacities for
leadership, management and technical expertise.
All over the world, investment in
university education is a critical component of national development effort.
Nations today depend largely on knowledge, ideas and skills which are produced
in universities (World Bank, 1997; OECD, 1996). As a nation’s knowledge
industry, the university increases the productive capacity of the labour force.
In the developed countries, for example, university’s scientists are able to
monitor global technological trends, assess their relevance to national needs
and assist in developing the national technological capacity for economic
growth.
Going by this trend, there has been
high demand for university education in Nigeria since independence in order to
increase the supply of manpower in the labour market. Following the
recommendation of the Ashby Commission of 1959 that new universities should be
established in the then three Regions and Lagos, the then Capital Territory,
University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and the
University of Ibadan together with University of Lagos, Lagos were established
as the first generation of universities in Nigeria. It is important to note
that since then the University system in Nigeria has grown by leaps and bounds.
The number of universities has increased from five in 1962 to one hundred and twenty-eight
(128) in 2013, comprising 40 Federal, 38 State and 50 private universities
(Okojie, 2013) and a total number of 151 in 2016 (National University
Commission, 2016).
The goals of university education as
stated by the Federal Republic of Nigeria (2009) are to;
i. contribute to national development through
high-level relevant manpower training;
ii. develop and inculcate proper values for the
survival of the individual and society;
iii. develop the intellectual capacity of
individuals to understand and appreciate their local and external environment;
iv. acquire both physical and intellectual
skills which enable individuals to be self-reliant and useful members of the
society;
v. promote and encourage scholarship and
community service;
vi. forge and cement national unity; and
vii. promote national and international
understanding and interaction (p. 38).
In spite of these noble goals,
Sofoluwe and Etejere (2011) noted that over the years, the tertiary educational
level has come under heavy criticisms, having failed to achieve the aim of
providing the kind of education that would solve the problems of the country as
a developing nation; such problems as abject poverty, corruption, unemployment
and mismanagement of resources. This is traceable to the challenges facing
university education in Nigeria which are poor funding, poor infrastructure,
political influence and incessant industrial actions. Others are cultism,
examination malpractices and poor quality of graduates.
Judging by this, it is evident that
universities in Nigeria are yet to be well-equipped to carry out these
responsibilities effectively due to human capacity deficiencies. Okojie (2013)
lamented that the Nigerian University System continues to lag terribly behind
competitive standards in the contemporary world. Engineering workshops, which
are meant to train 21st Century engineers are provided with equipment and
gadgets that were introduced in the 1960s.
Library books and journals date not later than the 1980s. Okojie further
noted that hostel rooms meant for four students in the 1970s were in 2012,
occupied by 12 students each having a “cooker corner” and using kerosene stove;
with the abysmally low level of research facilities in the universities, the
future is apparently bleak for Nigerian education.
This situation pervades mostly
developing nations of the world, especially African nations. Pauw, Ooshizen and
Westhuizen (2007) discovered in South Africa that many graduates lack soft
skills, workplace readiness and experience. Boateng and Ofori-Sarpong (2002)
also noted that in Ghana employers of labour referred to recent graduates as
those who lack basic skills to complete simple routine assignments and this
gave the impression that certification is a mere formality rather than an
indication of achievement. The situation is not different in Nigeria as
employers of labour believed that graduates are poorly trained and unproductive
on the job. Nigerian graduates have been described variously as half-baked,
ill-equipped, ill-trained, of poor quality, of a poor standard and unemployable
(Obayan, 2002). This explained why university education in Nigeria has not been
able to fulfil its mandate of producing high-level manpower needed for national
development in required quality that can fit and compete favourably both at
national and international labour market.
However, the current thinking is
that university education should develop in the beneficiary a certain number of
generic skills to a level that will ensure the continued creative productivity
of the individual. These skills, according to Obayan (2002), include:
i. analytical power: this comprises an
advanced capacity for logical reasoning, employing appropriate verbal,
quantitative, graphic, documentary, audio-visual, sensory perceptions and a
wide variety of tools.
ii. Communication: this includes oral and
written as well (as in other possible forms) using the appropriate language and
non-verbal form in specific situations to achieve specific objectives.
iii. problem-solving: this is the ability to
task one’s analytical power to the maximum in developing possible solution
paths to the problem in a variety of situations.
iv. Team spirit: is the ability to contribute
meaningfully to group activities in a wide variety of forms to relate with
others to get out of one’s shell while remaining oneself.
V.
creativity: refers to the ability to go beyond the well-trodden path in
thinking as well as in action.
vi. life-long learning skills; include
perseverance, risk taking, a spirit of enquiry, reading as a habit,
self-directed learning efforts, the activity to face challenges and so on (p.
4).
In today’s labour market, employers
of labour attach much importance to graduate employability which refers to work
readiness, that is, possession of the skills, knowledge, attitudes and
commercial understanding that will enable new graduates to make productive
contributions to organisational objectives soon after commencing work (Mason,
2001). Although, the Federal Government of Nigeria, in conjunction with some
agencies, at one time or another, have introduced some palliative measures to
address this challenge of unemployment by organizing different programmes like
National Directorate of Employment (NDE) that was launched in 1986 with the
mandate of designing programmes that will promote attitudinal change,
employment generation, poverty reduction and wealth creation; and National
Poverty Eradication Programme (NAPEP) was also launched in 2001 to address
poverty and related issues.
Others including You Win that was
launched in 2011 specifically to generate jobs by encouraging and supporting
aspiring entrepreneurial youth in Nigeria to develop and execute business ideas
that will lead to job creation; while the National University Commission (NUC)
introduced Entrepreneurial Studies as a compulsory course called “Graduates
Self-Employment” (GSE 301) into universities curriculum in 2004 to enable
university graduates to become self-employed. Yet, there is still the high rate
of unemployment, especially among the Nigerian university graduates. Even, the
Federal Government of Nigeria in 2008 acknowledged that about 80 percent of
Nigeria’s youth are unemployed and 10 percent underemployed (Daily Trust,
2008).
Oyesiku (2010) reported that
available statistics show that the nation’s job creation capacity is growing at
an annual rate of five percent and seven percent over the last seven years.
Meanwhile, about 213 Universities, Polytechnics and Colleges of Education in
the country then produced over 300,000 graduates annually; a number that should
ordinarily meet the country’s human capital resource needs, but employers
willing to pay well to attract skilled workers are increasingly finding it
difficult to fill the job vacancies. Federal Office of Statistic (2012) also
reported that with the current unemployment rate at 23.9 percent and unemployed
youth population put at 20.3 million, Nigeria generated about 4.5 million new
entrants into the labour market annually.
The Nigeria’s strong economic
performance over the last decade has not translated to jobs and real life
opportunities for its youth. Akanmu (2011) asserted that three out of ten
graduates of tertiary institutions cannot find work and being highly educated
does not increase the chance of finding a job. Those who find work are not
usually gainfully employed; some are forced to accept marginal jobs that do not
use their qualifications in sales, agriculture and manual labour while
employers are often looking for skills that go beyond qualifications and
experience. Apart from the sluggish growth rate of the Nigerian economy, it
lacks the structural and transformation capacity that is sufficient to expand
employment for the long bloated labour market. In other words, whatever growth
that takes place in Nigeria is not labour intensive and as such cannot generate
a commensurate proportion of jobs for the unemployed graduates.
Therefore, the Nigerian society
today is facing challenges of getting the education that will deliver to the
students the right set of skills and knowledge demanded by the labour market.
The reality on the ground is that university education should turn out students
who are ready to fill available jobs in the marketplace. The National
Universities Commission (2004) affirmed that massive unemployment of Nigerian
university graduates in the country is traceable to the disequilibrium between
labour market requirements and essential employable skills by the graduates.
However, contention exists regarding what exactly constitute what employers are
requiring from graduates in the labour market. It is against this background
that the researcher is interested in investigating the influence of labour
demand on university graduates’ employability in North-West, Nigeria.
Statement of the Problem
The issue of graduate employability
has become a worrisome trend in the Nigeria labour market. It has become a
serious concern to stakeholders (like employers of labour, training
institutions, parents and graduates). The Nigerian Employers Consultative
Association, (NECA) (2005) expressed that companies were not recruiting but
adopting employment protection strategies due to the very poor quality
graduates who do not meet demands of industries. Therefore, Chiacha and Amaechi
(2013) carried out a study on entrepreneurship education and graduate
employability in Nigeria. They found out that the entrepreneurial education
currently offered in schools did not lead to high employability index of
graduates. Also, Pitan & Adedeji (2012) examined the problem of skills
mismatch and its prevalence in the Nigeria labour market. The study discovered
that university graduates were not adequately prepared for work with respect to
skills demand of the labour market.
In spite of these findings, the challenge
of graduate employability still persists in Nigeria. National Bureau of
Statistics (2011) reported that the rate of unemployment in Nigeria was high
The report revealed that the North-west recorded highest rate of unemployment
with 25.40%, followed by South-west with 21.56%, North-east with 16.47%,
South-south was 12.03% while North-central had the lowest with 11.60%. This
situation became more alarming in the third quarter of 2014 where North-west
recorded 30.0%, North-east 23.9%, North-central 15.1%, South-east 8.9%,
South-west 8.9% and South-south 18.7% (Ajaiyakaye, 2016).
Based on the persistence and high
rate of unemployment in Nigeria, this study placed specific emphasis on the
North-west, Nigeria not only because of the increase in the rate of crimes and
insurgencies but also based on the report that the North-west recorded the
highest rate of unemployment of 30.0% as at the third quarter of 2014
(Ajaiyakaye, 2016). This is traceable to a mismatch between labour market
demand and employability skills of graduates. Therefore, a gap exists between
what is taught in school and the skills required to perform a job. This gap,
Kayode (2009) expressed, is responsible for a high percentage of young graduate
unemployment. The researcher, therefore, considers it highly essential to carry
out a study on labour market demand and university graduate employability
skills in North-west, Nigeria.
Purpose of the Study
The main purpose of this study is to
investigate the influence of labour market demand on University graduate
employability skills in North-west, Nigeria. However, the specific purposes of
the study are to:
1. Identify labour market demands for
university graduate employability in North-west, Nigeria;
2. Examine academic qualifications that
determine university graduate employability in North-west, Nigeria;
3. assess areas of specialisations that
determine university graduate employability in North-west, Nigeria;
4. identify work-related experience that
determines university graduate employability in North-west, Nigeria;
5. examine the age that determines university
graduate employability in North-west, Nigeria.
6. assess the mean rate of university graduate
employability skills in North-west, Nigeria.
Research Questions
The
following research questions would be raised to guide the study;
1. What are the labour market demands for
university graduate employability in North-West, Nigeria?
2. What are the academic qualifications that
determine university graduate employability in North-West, Nigeria?
3. What are the areas of specialisations that
determine university graduate employability in North-West, Nigeria?
4. What are the work-related experiences that
determine university graduate employability in North-West, Nigeria?
5. What is the age that determines university
graduate employability in North-West, Nigeria?
6. What is the mean rate of university
graduate employability skills in North-West, Nigeria?
Research Hypotheses
The
following hypotheses would be raised to guide the study;
Main
Hypothesis (Ho)
Ho:
There is no significant relationship between labour market demand and
university graduate employability skills in North-west, Nigeria.
Ho1: There is no significant relationship
between academic qualifications and university graduate employability skills in
North-west, Nigeria.
Ho2: There is no significant relationship
between areas of specialisations and university graduate employability skills
in North-west, Nigeria.
Ho3: There is no significant relationship
between work-related experience and university graduate employability skills in
North-west, Nigeria.
Ho4: There is no significant relationship
between age demand and university graduate employability skills in North-west,
Nigeria.
Significance of the Study
The outcome of this research would
provide useful information to educational managers, employers of labour, policy
makers and analysts, curriculum planners, students and academic researchers in
identifying the critical factors affecting the employability of Nigerian
University graduates and the nature of such effect.
The
outcome of the study would help educational managers to look inward and devise
series of means and strategies to produce students that would meet the required
skills and knowledge of modern labour market.
It would also enlighten government on how to plan for graduates in the
country and to equally put the necessary machinery in place geared at
repositioning the educational system to be more responsive to the needs of the
society. The outcome of the study would help in identifying and adopting
strategies to overcome skills shortages which will make university
administrators be a more responsive provider of quality education.
The finding of the study would provide an
opportunity to employers of labour to know the areas of weaknesses of graduates
and how to organise training programmes to address these weaknesses. The
findings of the study would provide the need to develop closer synergy between
employers of labour and universities administrator which would help in the
production of more quality graduates and creation of employment opportunities.
The
findings of the study would help policy makers and analysts to be more
concerned with the understanding of graduate employability and offer a
realistic description of the factors affecting individuals’ journeys in the
labour market. The outcome of the study would also assist analysts and
policy-makers to move towards more sustainable long-term labour market strategies
by helping to identify the range of labour market factors that hinder young
graduates from moving into suitable work as well as the necessary interventions
and their interconnections.
The
result of the study would enable curriculum planners, university senates,
directorates of academic planning in Nigerian universities to revisit academic
curricular of their institutions for the purposes of including those labour
demand that could possibly enhance the marketability of university graduates in
a more proactive way. It is hoped that the findings of this study would charge
all the Nigerian universities to reflect on the need to equip graduates with
‘deep’ intellectual capabilities and a battery of applied practical skills
which would make them more ‘work-ready’. Students may also find this study very
useful as they prepare for the world of work.
The
findings of the study would enlighten students on the skills they are supposed
to possess. A basis for further research in this area shall be created as the
findings of this study might fill the gap in the empirical research literature
for the benefit of educational researchers and reviewers.
Scope of the Study
The
geographical scope of the study is North-west Geopolitical Zone of Nigeria. The
zone comprises seven states namely; Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Sokoto, Kebbi,
Jigawa and Zamfara. The North-west is selected for this study because it
recorded the highest rate of unemployment of 30.0% (Ajaikaye, 2015). However,
four states are selected for the study, these are Zamfara, Jigawa, Kaduna and
Katsina States. These states are selected for the study in the North-west zone
because they recorded highest rates of unemployment (Zamfara, 42.6%, Jigawa,
35.9%, Kaduna, 30.3% and Katsina, 28.1%). Other states in the North-west which
would not be focused in the study are Kebbi with 25.3%, Kano with 21.3% and
Sokoto with the lowest rate of 17.9% rate of unemployment (Ajaikaye, 2015).
Labour market demand is identified as the
independent variable of the study while university graduate employability
skills are the dependent variable. The study would be carried out to
investigate the influence of labour market demand on university graduate
employability skills in the North-west Geopolitical Zone of Nigeria. The study
would focus on labour market demand and university graduate employability
skills with specific emphasis on academic qualifications, areas of
specialisation, work-related experience and age. University graduate
employability skills would be measured through communication skill, basic
computer skill, analytical skill, entrepreneurial skill, Information Technology
skill and interpersonal skill. These are referred to as soft skills. Soft
skills are those basic skills acquired by an individual within or outside the
school system which the National University Commission (2004) described as
non-academic skill. These skills are selected for the study because they are
basic and transferable skills. They are generic in nature and could be acquired
by all graduates regardless of their disciplines or field of study (Hager,
Holland & Beckett, 2002).
The
target population of the study comprises top management staff in educational
institutions, banking sector, commerce and manufacturing industries as well as
science and technology industries with the total number of 1,216. The sampling
scope of the study is selected by using the Research Advisor (2006) at 95%
confidence level of 5.0% margin of error to determine the sample size of 306.
However, the sample for the study would be 318 top management staff (which 16
top management staff from SUBEB and 20 from TESCOM, 20 directors and 20
supervisors from the States ministry of education, 27 registrars from the 27
tertiary institutions in the selected states, 84 bank management staff across
all the selected banks in the selected states, 64 top management staff from
commerce and industry and 64 from different organizations in science and
technology industry). The selection of these management staff is based on the
reason that, as operational managers, university graduates work directly under
them also these management staffs are charged with the responsibility of
evaluating and assessing the university graduates under them.
The instrument for the study would be a researcher-designed
questionnaire titled “Labour Market Demand and University Graduate
Employability Skills Questionnaire. This would comprise two sections “A and B”.
Section “A” would comprise personal information of respondents such as the name
of an organisation, type of organisation, location and position held. Section
“B” would consist of thirty (30) items drawn from the research questions raised
for the study.
Operational Definition of Terms
The following terms are
operationally defined in the study;
Labour Market Demand:
refers to factors considered by employers of labour for university graduate
employability. These are academic qualifications, areas of specialisations,
work-related experience and age.
Employability Skills:
are soft skills which are not specific to a particular discipline but to all
complex endeavours0. These are communication, basic computer, analytical,
entrepreneurial and interpersonal skills.
University Graduates:
are those who passed through the university system and certificated as being
competent in a particular field of study at first-degree level.
Academic Qualifications:
refer to the class of degree obtained by university graduates for
employability. These are 1st class, 2nd class upper, 2nd class lower, 3rd class
and pass.
Areas of Specialisations:
refers to Arts, Education, Social Sciences and Science and Technology.
Experience:
refers to relevant years of work considered for university graduates before
entering the labour market.
Age Demand:
refers to the age group of university graduates considered for recruitment by
employers of labour at the point of entering the labour market.
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