Analisis Peluang Kelayakan Kerja (Employability) Lulusan Kesejahteraan Sosial sebagai Praktisi Sumber Daya Manusia (Human Resources) di Industri
Abstract
The issue of graduate employability is not a new phenomenon. This is an
ongoing problem that needs to be considered by educational institutions as they adapt
to the ever-increasing labor market competition in the industry. Calls for certain
expertise and specializations continue to be industry expectations and ultimately have
a negative impact on graduates who are pursuing a general type of major. This study
aims to determine whether a social welfare graduate has a large or small chance of
being eligible to be a human resources practitioner in the industry. This research is
qualitative and uses descriptive data analysis techniques. This study uses graduates
majoring in social welfare in Indonesia as subjects, with data collection techniques
through library studies, internet-based research, as well as field studies that included
interviews and observations with practitioners of human resources in several
industries as informants. Based on the results of the study, the authors concluded that
the opportunity for social welfare graduates to become practitioners in human
resources feasibility exists. In the discussion, the factors that influence the magnitude
of the opportunity are: first, the views of human resources practitioners in the
industry towards social welfare graduates are still not optimal, but when human
resources practitioners already know in detail about social welfare and its graduates,
practitioners tend to believe in the skills possessed by social welfare graduates. This
is evidenced by the second factor found in the discussion, that the skills of social
welfare graduates are sufficient enough for a career in the field of human resources.
Furthermore, the third factor is how the industry is actually quite open to hiring
graduates of any education for positions in human resources as long as these
graduates possess the competencies required by the industry. This certainly can help
alleviate the fourth factor found: the level of market competition for positions in
human resources is quite competitive. With the sufficiency of industry openness and
competencies that social welfare graduates possess, they can easily compete in the
human resources job market.
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- Undergraduate Theses [1147]