Research questions
How can fashion graduates link fashion with other disciplines to help their have transferable skills to uncertainty in their early career?
To provide a platform for fashion graduates to use their fashion uniform symbols to combine with other uniform symbols to address employment issues.
Introduction
As a fashion graduate, I have seen through the news and interviews with fashion graduates that it is difficult for fashion graduates to find the jobs they want and that the whole fashion industry is on the inside. Many brands and fashion agencies often squeeze recent graduates, which puts pressure on fashion graduates.
Every time graduate show season takes centre stage, thousands of fashion graduates from the UK and other countries are competing for designer positions that fashion houses can barely find. The question of whether we are producing too many fashion designers is a tiresome one, and the answer is far too complex. There are around 4,000 fashion graduates each year, but only 500 jobs, so the most straightforward answer is yes. However, the idea of a ‘vocational degree’ is wrongly outdated. Today, fashion designers are expected to be multi-faceted creatives, and while fashion degrees and institutions can certainly provide designers with more entrepreneurial skills, the fashion industry is a constantly changing beast. Young designers are often told to keep up with the spread of fashion, science, ethics and business, not to mention the vital creative and technical skills needed to take a design from concept to finished formation and completion.
Despite the fact that UK universities and fashion schools are reputed to be among the best in the world, too many graduates leave school unsatisfied. According to annual satisfaction surveys, career paths are not adequately explained, technical courses like pattern cutting are missing, and business training is not even covered. In an interview with The Guardian, Sarah Mower (chief critic of Vogue.com) said: “A huge skills gap is emerging – many universities are no longer cutting patterns, and design houses are desperate for skilled pattern cutters and paying good salaries. People design a collection, but it’s the technicians who sew it.”
If more and more young designers want to set up on their own and create their own labels, then there is no doubt that fashion education needs to be overhauled. A degree in fashion needs time to evolve, question itself, challenge and reflect. Why does the final product have to be the ultimate collection that students spend hundreds to thousands of pounds to achieve? To simply mimic outdated industry structures, seasonal and traditional fashion presentations and rules that may never apply to them in the future? There should be choice and flexibility.
Beyond that, how else can we get students to demonstrate that they are already working towards honing a professional skill, interest, area of focus or aesthetic and technical study? What other option is there than to ask to learn and absorb everything in just three years, instead of focusing on a fleeting collection of modules, ad hoc projects and hastily realised finales? With the impending uprising of Generation Z, can the tiresome bureaucracy of traditional university education really meet the needs of a new generation of creative talent in practice?
For graduating fashion students, the logo of the school uniform is a great platform to give more meaning to their uniforms. Combine the symbols they carry with other elements.
The consistency and uniformity of school uniforms can act as a symbol for a group to have the same labeling symbol, which can be tangible or intangible. (Uniform=same, same symbols=uniform symbols.)
My experience, research and feedback led me to a question :
How can fashion graduates find out what they want to do in the future through a unified symbol?
(How can something be changed by combining a number of different uniform symbols to make it a new possibility for fashion graduates?)
My goal is to offer fashion graduates more possibilities for their future, rather than feeling anxious and confused. Something that can be done for graduates is to suggest that schools create additional courses applicable to vacant fashion industry positions to help fashion graduates face and match jobs.
(More research is needed on where fashion graduates are looking for jobs.)
Investigate whether CSM have courses or lessons for the business
Methodology
Read numerous books and articles on ……
Survey methodology
Questionnaire to fashion graduates on
whether there is pressure to find a job after graduation
Whether they would like to have additional courses on business and pattern making, etc., for post-graduation career paths during their studies
Focus groups
Organise a group discussion with 8-10 people
What they think about their current situation and their future
How do you feel about the introduction of business courses in schools?
Whether you would like to have more courses on business
Interviews
Interviews with fashion students, professors, fashion industry professionals, fashion graduates, etc. to discuss whether they would like to add business courses or if the school could find a better way to help students deal with psychological issues after graduation.
Intervention 1
My first intervention was to ask the fashion graduates to think about and take a photo of a fashion item that best represented them, to embellish the photo, to combine this with others in any way they could, to use their imagination and to see the end result.
The participants’ perception of their own personal fashion style, the use of photography as a symbol of unity, and the combination of the two, allows for the creation of a social media account.
Through this group, more people can be cultivated to join.
Through this Intervention, I can create a fashion group. in the process, they can also learn that there are other interests they can tap into besides fashion. I interviewed a blogger who managed to combine the two unifying symbols of fashion and self-publishing, and he made money by advertising cosmetics and clothing.
Intervention 2
Test how they feel about adding a business course at the Uniform Symbol Society.
*contact the experts
Contact the uni career search department
UK immigration experts
Successful brand entrepreneur (an appointment has been made to meet with a British lingerie brand entrepreneur).
Reflection & Analysis of Findings
Plan
Create a self-employment website by organising group members
Through the subsequent development of this group
Conclusion