University career services need to be โ€œcompletely accessible and representativeโ€, while institutions should do more to ensureย international students receive the right information about available support before they arrive in the UK, according toย Noleen Hammond Jones, international career manager at Lancaster University.

โ€œEvaluation, collaboration and really hearing the student voiceโ€ are crucial if students are to feel supported, according to Jones, with the journey being โ€œmassively overwhelming for studentsโ€.

โ€œMany have been told that good grades equal good jobs, so even though employability is the top reason they choose their institution, many of them arenโ€™t thinking about it at that stage,โ€ she continued.

Claire Cairns, senior director of recruitment atย Kaplanย International Pathways, further warned how institutions should not view international students a singular group, with employment support needing to be tailored. Many do not always see the value of their unique experiences due to not being โ€œdirectlyโ€ relevant to career goals, she suggested.

โ€œEven though employability is the top reason they choose their institution, many of them arenโ€™t thinking about it at that stageโ€

โ€œA lot of students put undue pressure on themselves to get top jobs after university when instead these early careers help students work out where they want to be or what they want,โ€ Cairns said.

โ€œBeing an international student is still seen, or at least felt by international students, as somewhat of a drawback rather than being an asset,โ€ Sanam Arora, founder and chairperson at National Indian Students and Alumni Union UK said.

Students frequently experience a catch twenty two in pursuit of work experience and employment, with companyโ€™s asking to see experience, but few open to providing it, she indicated.

โ€œWhy is it still the case that universities are not mandating or facilitating [work experience] as an intrinsic part of their education?โ€ she asked.

โ€œI donโ€™t think they see that they are fully supported, holistically, through that journey, because for the vast majority of students, they see education as a means to an end, and that end is a brilliant career and a great lifeโ€ฆ but I think instead of employability being centred around education, I think it has to be the other way round now. Education has to centred around employability,โ€ she said.

A recentย UPP Foundationย report described employment support as an area forย โ€œhuge opportunityโ€, and advised providers to place employability as the UKโ€™sย top priority for international students.

In 2021,ย Louise Nicol, founder of Asia Careers Group SDN BHD, warned that there were only โ€œpockets of best practiceโ€, withย Birmingham and Warwickย offering a โ€œmore Asia-centric careers fairโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s really important that we start to tailor the advice we give to international students by country, by what their labour markets are doing, by how their graduate recruiters recruit. The rest of the world doesnโ€™tย necessarilyย have the milk round,โ€ she said at the time.

Many employers in the UK showย reluctance to hire international students over confusion and implications surrounding immigration, working visas and graduate routes, with stakeholders calling forย โ€œvisa-blindโ€ graduate roles and closer working relationships with employers to address โ€œreal diversity in the workplaceโ€.

Rajay Maik, chief executive officer at Skilled Education, is quick to support the value of international students, who โ€œcome from an education system where theyโ€™ve had a really didactic experienceโ€, with potential to transform the โ€œglobal position and successโ€ of sectors.

The stakeholders were speaking at The PIEโ€™s recent PIE Live 2022 event in London.

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