Mays Sweidan & Ahmed Hamad
In the competitive landscape of higher education, universities face the challenge of attracting and enrolling students who are not only academically qualified and well-informed of the educational institution’s values and offerings but also help them set goals and realistic expectations related to their professional development in the new socioeconomical context.
Socially responsible student recruitment process is not a goal but rather a lively process that seeks to achieve this balance by prioritizing the well-being and informed the decision-making of prospective students while maintaining the integrity and reputation of the university. This article delves into the principles, current practices, outcomes, and future considerations of the concept of socially responsible student recruitment, emphasizing the importance of internal collaboration and ethical marketing.
Goals and Values of Socially Responsible Student Recruitment
The primary goal of socially responsible student recruitment process is to ensure that prospective students make well-informed decisions that are in their best interest. This involves providing clear, accurate, and comprehensive information about the university’s programs, resources, available services, and student culture.
In addition to that, it also delves into the life outside of the university by providing resources about employment, the Finnish job market and social integration. By doing so, institutions can help students to select a future studying place that aligns with their academic and personal aspirations, knowing what it takes to develop professionally as well as cultivating a sense of belonging within the society, which has a significant role in maintaining their wellbeing and thereby enhancing student satisfaction and success.
This initiative started as a series of strategical planning meetings between teams within the university to provide an action plan to consider while planning for each team’s individual task. The following teams and their perspectives are involved in the initial stage of this initiative:
- The admission services team: providing their insights on the admission criteria with a focus on both sides of the equation, what is required from the student and the university. Therefore, how it can potentially influence the student’s decision to choose programs. Questions received from the students regarding professional development, employment, scholarships, and financial aid.
- The student recruitment team: providing their insights from student fairs, recruitment agencies and prospect student’s push and pull factors.
- The international marketing team: providing their insights on the marketing campaigns’ content, communication patterns, timetables and developing areas.
- Career services student interface team: providing their perspective on the nature of the Finnish job market with a focus on international students.
Key values underpinning this approach include:
- Transparency: providing honest and detailed information about academic programs, campus life, financial aid, and career prospects within reasonable time frame to ensure the students’ readability.
- Integrity: aligning marketing practices with the university’s actual strengths and values, avoiding exaggerated or misleading claims. With a focus on providing a clear description of the provided services with an emphasis on personal motivation and self-initiation.
- Student-Centricity: prioritizing the needs and aspirations of prospective students in all recruitment efforts and beyond.
- Collaboration: fostering internal cooperation among different departments to ensure a unified and coherent recruitment strategy.
Current Process: A Collaborative, Iterative Design Approach, and preventative measures through risk management.
The current recruitment process at many universities has evolved through a series of iterative design approaches, informed by previous lessons and continuous improvement. While this approach provides evident based analysis, the socially responsible student recruitment process also takes into consideration risk management principles and preventative measures to ensure that the relationship between the prospect student and the educational institution is a well-founded start for their accountability journey with the new society.
The connection higher education institution form with its prospective students is a crucial part of the overall accountability movement students will have with their future self. The entirety of this movement emphasizes the commodification of knowledge into distinct, measurable, evidence-based skills that will end up shaping the students over all experience (Hall, 2005). The current process considers the following steps:
- Brainstorming Sessions: creative sessions to generate new ideas for recruitment campaigns and identify potential areas for improvement.
- Collaborative Meetings: regular meetings involving admission services, student recruitment teams, career services, and the international marketing team members to align goals and create a coherent plan.
- Feedback Loops: share feedback from prospective students, current students, and alumni to refine recruitment practices.
Focal areas
Each team brings distinct expertise and perspectives that contribute to a holistic approach, ensuring that prospective students receive accurate information and support throughout their recruitment journey. By understanding the specific roles of admission services, student recruitment teams, career services, and marketing teams, institutions can create a cohesive and ethical recruitment process.
This section explores how each team contributes to fostering transparency, enhancing student engagement, and aligning recruitment practices with the values and aspirations of prospective students.
- Admission Services: provides their insights on how the application processing and evaluation can affect the student’s decision-making process ensuring a fair, transparent, and equitable admission process. Focus à Information Dissemination
- Student Recruitment Team: develop a communication strategy that aligns not only with their goals but also with the ‘’socially responsible’’ part of this process by helping prospect students with realistic expectations and provide other teams with any occurring themes and questions provided by the students and recruitment agencies. Focus à Outreach and Engagement.
- Career Services Team: provide detailed information about career prospects, the importance of social integration, job placement rates, challenges that students face regarding employment and clarify the role of career services to prospective students. Focus à Long Term Professional Development.
- International Marketing Team: create engaging and informative content across various platforms to help students build realistic expectations regarding the Finnish job market and society as well as highlight genuine student experiences, achievements, and testimonials to build trust with prospective students. Focus à Trust Building Content
The combined efforts of each team are meant to result in a cohesive and consistent message. By employing this cross-departmental insights to create comprehensive informational resources students are potentially receiving a realistic flaw of information that addresses potential risks.
In addition to that timing is always put into the table throughout questioning when students would benefit from certain information and in what areas the impact will follow. For instance, introducing prospective students to the importance of the Finnish language and networking to gain quality employment within one’s field is fed throughout the recruitment process since the beginning. Another example is to shed light on how the Finnish job market function regarding part-time jobs during studies and through financial literacy students are informed to set up realistic expectations regarding covering their life expenses.
Outcomes and Results
The adoption of socially responsible student recruitment practices is expected to yield several positive outcomes:
- Enhanced Student Satisfaction: by providing transparent and accurate information, students are better able to make decisions that align with their goals, leading to higher satisfaction and retention rates.
- Stronger Community Engagement: by prioritizing social responsibility in the recruitment process and beyond. Students will potentially develop a sense of trust and engagement within their communities not only at university campus but also within the social contexts.
- Long-Term Success: by making a well-informed decision, students are more likely to develop a sense of commitment to the process of professional development and social integration knowing that motivation and employing the available resources are defining factors.
Best Practices for Socially Responsible Student Recruitment
Based on the insights from internal collaboration and external benchmarking, several best practices have emerged:
- Transparent Communication: include new areas of focus to marketing materials and communications such as providing a realistic view of the university experience, financial literacy, employment, and social integration as early as possible.
- Ethical Marketing and Communication: by avoiding sensationalism and focusing on the genuine experiences, expectations, and real outcomes.–
- Student Involvement: involving current students and alumni in recruitment activities and provide students with authentic perspectives and insights.
Future Considerations
Looking ahead, the process aims to innovate and adapt the recruitment practices to meet the evolving needs of prospective students, sufficiently meet the university’s financial requirements and the ever-changing job market. Key considerations for the process include:
- Make sure to adhere to the Finnish national code of conduct of student recruitment.
- Develop methods to increase the international student’s’ financial knowledge and literacy (costs, expenses, income, meeting the deadlines… etc.)
- Provide the students with practical tools on how to include integration related activities in their daily schedules to boost their social integration.
- Keeping the link between the university and the employer’s interface lively and informative to ensure not only the employability of the students but also the employer’s readiness.
- Align the marketing campaigns and messaging with the timeline students face certain challenges to ensure the availability of the right resources for them to benefit from
- Highlight the importance of the student’s motivation and eagerness in the process of integration as well as professional development.
- Develop a short term as well as long term set of solutions to current and possible challenges students might face regarding the recruitment and settling down processes.
- Define a clear communication line between the departments internally to ensure effective customer service where the goal is to unify answers and limit redirections.
Conclusion
In the competitive landscape of higher education, universities face the critical challenge of not only attracting and enrolling academically qualified students but also ensuring that these prospective students are well-informed and prepared for their academic and professional journeys. A socially responsible student recruitment process plays a pivotal role in achieving this balance by prioritizing the well-being and informed decision-making of prospective students while maintaining the integrity and reputation of the institution.
Throughout this article, the fundamental goals and values of the socially responsible student recruitment process has been explored. By emphasizing transparency, integrity, student-centricity, and collaboration. These principles guide the efforts of admission services, student recruitment teams, career services, and international marketing teams, each bringing unique expertise and perspectives to the recruitment process.
Admission services ensure a fair and transparent admission process, providing clear information that aids in student decision-making. Student recruitment teams focus on outreach and engagement, helping prospective students set realistic expectations and understand the university’s offerings. Career services provide insights into the job market and long-term professional development, while the international marketing team builds trust through authentic content that highlights genuine student experiences and achievements.
The collaborative and iterative design approach of the recruitment process, informed by continuous feedback and improvement, underscores the importance of risk management and the accountability movement. By commoditizing knowledge into measurable, evidence-based skills, universities prepare students for future success while fostering a sense of belonging and engagement within the academic and social communities.
The outcomes of adopting socially responsible student recruitment practices are significant, including enhanced student satisfaction, stronger community engagement, and long-term success. By making well-informed decisions, students are more likely to thrive academically, professionally, and socially, contributing positively to the university’s reputation and overall mission.
In conclusion, socially responsible student recruitment process is not merely a goal but an ongoing, dynamic process that requires the collective efforts of various teams within the university. By fostering transparency, ethical marketing, and student involvement, universities can create a recruitment process that truly supports the aspirations and well-being of prospective students, ultimately leading to a more engaged and successful student body.
Authors
Mays Sweidan, Planning Officer at Career Services, LUT University & LAB University of Applied Sciences, mays.sweidan(a)lut.fi
Ahmed Hamad, Head of Admission Services at LUT University & LAB University of Applied Sciences, ahmed.hamad@lut.fi
References
Hall, K. 2005. Science, globalization, and educational governance. Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 12(1): 153–182.
Unifi. (n.d.). Ethical guidelines for international student recruitment in use by Finnish higher education institutions. Universities Finland UNIFI. Retrieved from https://unifi.fi/en/ethical-guidelines-for-international-student-recruitment-in-use-by-finnish-higher-education-institutions/
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