It’s official, over a fifth of young people are unemployed and left unable to get onto the job market. Everyone is affected by the recession, although it has technically passed, unemployment continues to rise.
It is an issue that’s impossible to ignore the effects it has on students. Especially on the jobs market. We see jobs that graduates were qualified to do are taken by professionals who have been made redundant. -professionals with the qualifications and the experience.
So where does that leave us students? I interviewed BCU students to find out…
Our postgraduate, Martyn – studying a Law Practitioners Course ,part-time, feels some employers take advantage of the situation, by not paying graduates for the experience they desperately need to get their foot in the door. Stating that it’s a Catch 22 working in retail to cover the costs of his course and day-to-day life, leaving him unable to go out and gain that experience.
Matt, our fresher – studying Media and Communications, says he has been searching for a part-time job for at least two years. It seems, he feels, as though employers automatically assume that because he is a student, he isn’t right for the job, especially as he has to commute every day.
We are definitely at a disadvantage to getting our foot in the door; we knew before we begun university it wasn’t a guarantee into a job at the end. But what can we do to earn a little extra cash whilst we study?
It is important to network and get as involved in the industry as much as possible, to increase your chances of getting a job after you leave. However, is it possible to do this whilst balancing your studies and your job…
Martyn certainly struggles to do so, as does employed undergraduate, Alex. Maybe it isn’t as hard as we think. With a low hour contract, (some available as 0 hours), you can stay flexible without compromising your studies – especially, when assignments are due.
Megan Dickie











