Architecture’s Afterlife: The Multi-sector impact of an architectural qualification Erasmus Project

General information for the Architecture’s Afterlife: The Multi-sector impact of an architectural qualification Erasmus Project

Architecture’s Afterlife: The Multi-sector impact of an architectural qualification  Erasmus Project
January 1, 2023 12:00 am
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Project Title

Architecture’s Afterlife: The Multi-sector impact of an architectural qualification

Project Key Action

This project related with these key action: Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices

Project Action Type

This project related with this action type : Strategic Partnerships for higher education

Project Call Year

This project’s Call Year is 2019

Project Topics

This project is related with these Project Topics: Overcoming skills mismatches (basic/transversal); New innovative curricula/educational methods/development of training courses; Recognition, transparency, certification

Project Summary

This study’s principal aim is to identify the multi-sector impact of an architecture degree within the context of Europe and the extent to which skills taught to architecture students are needed in other sectors. The study seeks to understand the skills gaps and mismatches between (1) what is taught in architecture schools and what is needed by today’s architecture practices (2) what is taught in architecture schools and what is needed by other professions, industries and sectors with the goal to identify opportunities for a multi-disciplinary and transdisciplinary curriculum that could more effectively serve student, labour market and societal needs. It responds to early-stage findings from a pre-application survey entitled “Architectural education: a progression inquiry” that elicited over 2500 responses from architecture graduates across the EU, and identified that on average, 40% of European Architecture graduates choose to work in the creative and cultural professions other than architecture. This study seeks to understand why this is. It will identify the push and pull factors facing graduates, the sectors to where its target group – architecture graduates – are gravitating, the skills that are lacking in these sectors and how this deficit is impacting upon sector growth.

Its main objectives are to, (1) To map the extent to which architecture graduates are migrating into other creative and cultural sectors, across EU members-states and draw country-specific comparisons, (2) explore which industries architecture graduates are migrating towards, and to map their advancement levels within these sectors, (3) identify which skills are most transferable between different sectors, those that are most valuable, and in which sectors skills shortages are situated (4) assess the potential positive impact upon the architecture industry and upon the affected sectors, (5) assess the impact for HE curricula, with a view to identifying key trans-disciplinary skills, and (6) to yield outcomes that benefit students, academe and industry.

Methodologically, the study aims to ensure all EU countries are represented and able to have access to and benefit from country-specific performance metrics to make school, region, country or trans-national comparisons. Respondents will be recruited using a combination of professional networks and representative (across all affected sectors) and university alumni offices, in effect, the same tactics used in the pre-application enquiry. A mixed methods approach will blend online (quantitative data) with qualitative evidence provided in interviews and examined against cross-European sector-specific performance data including skills deficit forecasts and analysis. A grounded theory approach will provide a framework for identifying unanticipated challenges, correlations and opportunities for deeper analysis. The collected results in each country will be compared with the local general higher education frameworks to understand when a lack of specific education is the main reason for the moving of architectural students toward other sectors.

The research partners represent established academics drawn from North, South Central and Eastern Europe who have each already established a portfolio of work that is directly related to the focus of this study.

The study is innovative because it will provide a much-needed trans-national and trans-sector taxonomy of skills needed to sustain and grow a range of non-architectural sectors, that benefit from employing graduates who hold architecture’s core competencies, such as spatial skills, complexity management, spatial envisioning, and digital visualization. It will address the lack of alignment between discipline-specific skills and sector-specific skills. This study will help HE institutions address this mismatch, by identifying which digital skills can transfer easily across sectors, and by implication, adjust pedagogy and improve employability by changing curricula in response to this.

Findings from the study will impact in several ways, including, (i) enabling higher education institutions to focus upon teaching more trans-sector, industry-relevant skills and in doing so increase the competitiveness of European Higher Education against other world-leading education institutions, (ii) providing recommendations for European directives and professional qualification frameworks that will increase trans-national mobility and knowledge exchange (iii) increase student confidence in the value and utility of their skills and qualifications, their preparedness for their professional lives and range of career options and, (iv) impact positively on employers by reconfiguring qualification curricula and categorisation to better represent skills rather than disciplines that will improve task-relevant recruitment and retention and, as a consequence, improve post-graduate employment prospects and pan-sector performance.

EU Grant (Eur)

Funding of the project from EU: 448799 Eur

Project Coordinator

THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF ART & Country: UK

Project Partners

  • KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT LEUVEN
  • SVEUCILISTE U ZAGREBU
  • UNIVERSITEIT ANTWERPEN
  • POLITECNICO DI TORINO
  • UNIVERSITAT POLITECNICA DE VALENCIA