Abstract

Kaizen -based work-readiness training originated in Japan and is based on the ‘lean’ production methods taught in Toyota factories in Japan and abroad. Kaizen -based training is rooted in the Kaizen principles of respect for others, the elimination of waste, continuous improvement, collaboration as the key to productivity and innovation as incremental in work processes. The Employability Improvement Programme (EIP), an initiative between the South African Department of Higher Education and Training, the Japan International Cooperation Agency and South African Universities of Technology, is a Kaizen -based short training programme that was introduced in 2011 with the intention to enhance South African University of Technology students’ work-readiness. The research question guiding the study is: how could a short Kaizen -based intervention contribute to South African University of Technology students’ work-readiness? The data for the study comprise curriculum documents, teaching and learning media, video footage and interviews with participants of the Kaizen events over the period 2016–2018. The study found that the EIP supported students’ acquisition of interpersonal skills and personal dispositions towards work-readiness, but skills that were related to workplace relations in context, professional values and a sense of a broader contribution to society were largely absent. The study recommends that longer term, more integrated and better contextualised forms of training are necessary in attaining work-readiness in the complex South African work context.

Highlights

  • Graduate unemployment is a concern for higher education internationally (Chan 2015; Tomlinson 2017) and in South Africa (Kraak 2015; Van Broekhuizen 2016)

  • The knowledge contribution that the Employability Improvement Programme (EIP) curriculum evaluation makes is the development of a theory-driven evaluation instrument, which has an application beyond the EIP to a work-readiness programme in general

  • Somewhere between the criticisms of Kaizen-based workreadiness training as ‘instruments for the oppression of the workforce’ (Sears 2003) and the praise heaped on them as courses where students ‘learned more ... than [in] any course they had taken in college’ (Murman 2017:vi) is a middle ground that recognises their shortcomings and acknowledges their potential

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Summary

Introduction

Graduate unemployment is a concern for higher education internationally (Chan 2015; Tomlinson 2017) and in South Africa (Kraak 2015; Van Broekhuizen 2016). It is a particular concern for the Universities of Technology as most of the programmes offered are diploma-level qualifications that prepare students for direct entry into labour markets, supported by practice-oriented curricula, internships and other forms of work-integrated learning. This skills’ mismatch has adversely affected the employment prospects of University of Technology graduates more than other higher education cohorts (Kraak 2015:101–102)

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