Abstract
Introduction: Environmental health is a rapidly evolving field, and professionals working in this field have to deal with increasingly complex environmental and public health concerns. Consequently, their skill development is a key component in ascertaining their abilities to match work requirements to the satisfaction of their employers. Training and education of these professionals requires involvement of the relevant stakeholders to apt their technical skills in preparation of the role to be undertaken. Thus, the universities and other institutions of higher learning, in their efforts to improve graduate output should understand the labor market. Additionally, due to constant transformation and reorganization of strategies and plans by practitioner organizations, employers’ perspective in assessing graduates’ abilities and performance is necessary. Aim: The purpose of this study was to assess the employers’ perspectives on the graduates’ abilities to handle work demands. Methods: A cross sectional descriptive study design involving employers and graduates of environmental health program of Moi University using mixed methods was carried out. Pretested semi structured paper questionnaires were administered to 45 employers, while online survey was carried out on 227 sampled graduates. In-depth interviews were further subjected to the graduates to corroborate issues raised. Quantitative data analysis was done using statistical package for social scientists (SPSS) version 20 where the data was summarized using frequencies and proportions. Qualitative data was thematically analyzed. Results: The overall employer assessment of the graduates’ abilities to handle work demands was satisfactory with 18 (46.1% 7 of the employers rating them as good). On self-assessment, 116 (61.7%) of the graduates reported not to have faced any skills competency challenge at their work place and only 57 (30.3%) reported adequacy in skills acquired during undergraduate training. From the in-depth interviews, the graduates applauded the current curriculum implementation strategy of Problem Based Learning (PBL) but faulted the infrastructural inadequacies for low competencies and inadequate skills. The in-depth interviews further revealed a picture of graduates struggling with skills’ mismatch in their job placement. Conclusion: The study revealed a good rating by employers on the graduates’ competency skills but a high proportion (69.7%) of graduates reported lack of adequate skills to match their work demands. Recommendations: Institutions of higher learning need to invest in infrastructural elements of curriculum implementation to boost more practical sessions for better skills’ acquisition that matches the industrial needs.
Highlights
Environmental health is a rapidly evolving field, and professionals working in this field have to deal with increasingly complex environmental and public health concerns
Of the 227 graduates sampled for the study, 188 completed the questionnaires, giving a response rate of 82.8%
116/188 (61.7%) of the graduates reported that they did not face any competency challenges in their work place. This finding is consistent with those of a study done by Prince et al [16] where junior doctors transitioning from medical school to clinical practice in the Netherlands reported that their undergraduate training was adequate in terms of skills acquisition that boosted their confidence in clinical practice
Summary
Environmental health is a rapidly evolving field, and professionals working in this field have to deal with increasingly complex environmental and public health concerns. One of the factors singled out for graduate unemployment in Kenya is an increasing mismatch between education skills, practical and the domains of the job market [2] This has led to the mounting increase in global concerns and the campaigns for the need for competent public health workforce that is responsive to the ever-changing public health complexities [3]. This is an aspect of quality assurance and high competency training advocated for by the Kenyan Commission for University Education (CUE) established in 2012 under the Universities Act No 42 of 2012 as a successor to the Commission for Higher Education in Kenya. A host of questionable practices affecting the quality of the Kenya’s rapidly expanding higher education sector and that of its graduates still exists [4] [6] [7]
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