Colm McGuinness
Institute of Technology, Blanchardstown
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Trials | 2018
Nuala Whelan; Sinead McGilloway; Mary Murphy; Colm McGuinness
BackgroundLabour market policy (LMP) and its implementation have undergone rapid change internationally in the last three decades with a continued trend towards active LMP. In Ireland however, this shift has been more recent with ongoing reforms since 2012 and a concomitant move toward active labour market ‘work-first’ policy design (i.e. whereby unemployed people are compulsorily required to work in return for their social welfare benefits). Labour market policies vary from those that require this compulsory approach to those which enable the unemployed to move towards sustainable quality work in the labour market through upskilling (human capital approach). Despite this, however, long-term unemployment—a major cause of poverty and social exclusion—remains high, while current employment support approaches aimed at sustainable re-employment are, arguably, unevaluated and under examined. This study examines the effectiveness of a new high support career guidance intervention in terms of its impact on aspects of wellbeing, perceived employability and enhancing career sustainability.MethodThe study involves a single-centre randomised, controlled, partially blinded trial. A total of 140 long-term unemployed job-seekers from a disadvantaged urban area will be randomly assigned to two groups: (1) an intervention group; and (2) a ‘service as usual’ group. Each group will be followed up immediately post intervention and six months later. The primary outcome is wellbeing at post intervention and at six-month follow-up. The secondary outcome is perceived employability, which includes a number of different facets including self-esteem, hopefulness, resilience and career self-efficacy.DiscussionThe study aims to assess the changes in, for example, psychological wellbeing, career efficacy and hopefulness, that occur as a result of participation in a high support intervention vs routinely available support. The results will help to inform policy and practice by indicating whether a therapeutic approach to job-seeking support is more effective for long-term unemployed job-seekers than routinely available (and less therapeutic) support. The findings will also be important in understanding what works and for whom with regard to potentially undoing the negative psychological impacts of unemployment, building psychological capital and employability within the individual, and developing career trajectories leading to more sustainable employment.Trial registrationISRCTN registry, ISRCTN16801028. Registered on 9 February 2016.
Archive | 2016
Geraldine Gray; Colm McGuinness; Philip Owende
It is increasingly evident that significant numbers of college students do not complete the courses on which they enrol, particularly for courses with lower entry requirements (ACT, 2012). Enrolment numbers to tertiary education are increasing, as is diversity in student populations (OECD, 2013). This adds to the challenge of both identifying students at risk of failing, and provisioning appropriate supports to enable all students perform optimally (Mooney et al., 2010).
ieee international advance computing conference | 2014
Geraldine Gray; Colm McGuinness; Philip Owende
educational data mining | 2013
Geraldine Gray; Colm McGuinness; Philip Owende
Journal of learning Analytics | 2016
Geraldine Gray; Colm McGuinness; Philip Owende; Markus Hofmann
Archive | 2013
Aiden Carthy; Celesta McCann; Sinead McGilloway; Colm McGuinness
AISHE-J: The All Ireland Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education | 2012
Aiden Carthy; Celesta McCann; Sinead McGilloway; Colm McGuinness
EDM (Workshops) | 2014
Geraldine Gray; Colm McGuinness; Philip Owende
Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | 2016
Ailish Jameson; Aiden Carthy; Colm McGuinness; Fiona McSweeney
Archive | 2016
Lorna Lawless; Colm McGuinness; Aiden Carthy; Fiona McSweeney