Thousands of students leave higher education without graduating, and worry about the negative consequences of dropping out on labour market success. However, research on how employers evaluate higher education dropouts is lacking. And while studies on school-to-work transitions are plentiful, most of them focus on the consequences of successfully attained educational qualifications – and ignore the consequences of unsuccessfully attempted qualifications.
Drawing on human capital, signalling, and credentialism theories, we conducted a series of factorial survey experiments with random samples of employers (N = 1350) to answer the following research questions: First, what is the causal effects of a dropout on the hiring prospects for different types of positions? Second, which factors facilitate labor market entry for dropouts?
Our findings indicate that employment chances depend heavily on the type of job dropouts compete for, and on the mode and duration of the study episode.
Termin
5.3.2020
, 13:00 bis 14:00 Uhr
Zu Gast
Professor Martin Neugebauer (Freie Universität Berlin)
Ort
Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung
Regensburger Straße 100
Raum E10
90478 Nürnberg