Media work and the creative industries: identity work, professionalism and employability

Ashton, D (2011) 'Media work and the creative industries: identity work, professionalism and employability.' Education and Training, 53 (6). pp. 546-560.

Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/00400911111159494

Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the situated understandings that higher education students can offer on their employability, and to make sense of “employability” in industry and career context-specific ways. The paper further seeks to explore potential critical reflections on emerging professional practice and future employment conditions. Design/methodology/approach – Drawing on interviews and focus groups conducted with students located within a university-operated industry-facing media production studio, this paper focuses on how students articulate their career development and aspirations. Findings – Discussing their studio experience and forms of “identity work”, students would nuance “employability” in terms of media industry-specific concepts of creativity and professionalism. Anxieties around future professional practice were also voiced, signaling the potential value of a Career Studies approach that creates a space for explicitly exploring employment conditions as personally meaningful concerns. Research limitations/implications – Noting how employability is articulated in terms of industry professionalism, this paper encourages analysis that is attentive to situated understandings and identity work. Given the studio and media focus, application of findings may be limited. Practical implications – Relevant for industry employers is how students make sense of their future career aspirations and undertake “work on the self” that is bound up with but also potentially critical of professional norms, quality of life and work conditions. Originality/value – Recognising how employment can be understood in terms of “professionalism”, this paper suggests how an exploration of discourses and practices of professionalism can be part of a wider examination of employability. This paper explores the value of the Career Studies approach for integrating questions of student identity with subject-specific accounts critical to employment conditions and practices.

Item Type: Article
Keywords: Career studies, Employability, Identity work, Media industries, Professionalism, Universities, Working conditions
Divisions: Bath School of Art, Film and Media
Date Deposited: 01 Feb 2013 13:44
Last Modified: 27 Oct 2022 14:42
ISSN: 0040-0912
URI / Page ID: https://researchspace.bathspa.ac.uk/id/eprint/576
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