National Guidance Research Forum Promoting evidence-based policy & practice in careers work

Skip to content.

NGRF - UK National Guidance Research Forum

Sections
Note: This site's content is accessible to all versions of every browser. However, this browser may not support basic Web standards, preventing the display of our site's design details. We support the mission of the Web Standards Project in the campaign encouraging users to upgrade their browsers.


Discussion Topic [details and replies]

Guidance Community Discussion Space :: helping build careers Weblog 122 entries 08-July-2008 36 authors
Future trends catagories Blog Entry 1 reply1 resource 15-September-2004 Caroline Tolond
Scientific research category Discussion Topic 1 reply 16-September-2004 Sally-Anne Barnes
show or hide details for this item Scientific Research category Discussion Topic 1 reply 09-November-2004 Deirdre Hughes
Kind:
Discussion Topic
Created:
09-November-2004 22:14:53
Last Updated:
04-September-2006 10:49:16
Author:
Deirdre Hughes
Status:
visible
Might it be helpful to share the thinking behind the initial observation re: an absence in data? This would enable others, like myself and the NLRG team to also feed in ideas.... just a thought.

Might it be helpful to share the thinking behind the initial observation re: an absence in data? This would enable others, like myself and the NLRG team to also feed in ideas.... just a thought.

Comments please

Please Log in

Username

Password

Title
Lead-in
Body Text ( HTML tags are allowed )
Preview your comment


Absence of data - inital thought Discussion Topic 1 reply 10-November-2004 Caroline Tolond
Kind:
Discussion Topic
Created:
10-November-2004 10:12:16
Last Updated:
Never Modified
Author:
Caroline Tolond
Well I work as a careers adviser for the Royal Society of Chemistry and therefore have an interest in finding out what are seen as trends in this area are. From my work with my client group at the RSC (45,000 members)I know there is a substantial amount of R&D occuring, but it would be...

Well I work as a careers adviser for the Royal Society of Chemistry and therefore have an interest in finding out what are seen as trends in this area are. From my work with my client group at the RSC (45,000 members)I know there is a substantial amount of R&D occuring, but it would be interesting to have this quantified in some way so that I and others working with clients in this area (e.g. university careers advisers/high street advisers) have more to go on.