Top.Mail.Ru
Preview

Vestnik Universiteta

Advanced search

Professional and educational orientations of final-year students at regional university (based on empirical research)

https://doi.org/10.26425/1816-4277-2025-4-230-239

Abstract

The issue of incompleteness of the professional self-determination processes, characteristic of modern youth in general, has been studied. The emphasis has been placed on the institutional and structural conditions that determine the opportunities and limitations for successful professional socialization of young people in the context of specific territories. In the conditions of the Murmansk Region, the significant factors are demographic decline and personnel hunger, which determined the public demand for population retention and the quality of life improvement. The state of professional and educational orientations of the regional student population is a special research issue in the context of regional comprehensive development tasks realization. The analysis is based on the results of sociological research conducted in 2024 by online survey method among final-year students of regional universities in the Murmansk Region (477 people). The following main trends in the students’ professional and educational orientations have been revealed: a broad request for continuing education outside the region in a significant group of respondents (mainly those who receive secondary vocational education), fairly high rates of loyalty to the received direction of training/specialty, and active involvement in secondary employment in the process of education. The obtained results have applied value within the framework of the regional system of vocational education activities to retain the internal flow of students in the transition between training levels and to build further educational and professional trajectory of graduates.

About the Authors

E. N. Sharova
Murmansk Arctic University
Russian Federation

Ekaterina N. Sharova - Cand. Sci. (Sociol.), Head of the Research Laboratory of Sociological Research.

Murmansk



D. V. Maleus
Murmansk Arctic University
Russian Federation

Diana V. Maleus - Sociologist at the Research Laboratory of Sociological Research.

Murmansk



References

1. Zakharkin R.A. Secondary socialization as one of the basic social processes in modern society. Theory and practice of social development. 2018;1:9–14. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.24158/tipor.2018.1.1

2. Bolshov V.B. University environment as a space for self-realization of student youth. Social competence. 2021;1(6):93–112. (In Russian).

3. Zubok Yu.A., Chuprov V.I. Life strategies of young people: fulfillment of expectations and social sentiments. Monitoring public opinion: economic and social changes. 2020;3:13–41. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.14515/monitoring.2020.3.1602

4. Sharova E.N. Professional self-determination of young people in the context of socio-cultural transformation of Russian society (on the example of the Murmansk region). Abstr. Dis. … Cand. Sci. (Sociol.): 22.00.04. Arkhangelsk: Northern Federal University named after M.V. Lomonosov; 2012. 25 p. (In Russian).

5. Sitnikova I.V. The process of professional self-determination of young people: school – university – labor market: on the example of the Nizhny Novgorod region. Diss. … Cand. Sci. (Sociol.): 22.00.04. Nizhny Novgorod: National Research Nizhny Novgorod State University named after N.I. Lobachevsky; 2022. 175 p. (In Russian).

6. Abdullin A.G., Likholetov V.V., Ryabova I.G. Self-determination and self-realization of Russian youth: social, moral and psychological and pedagogical aspects of the problem. Integration of education. 2021;3(25):440–462. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.15507/1991-9468.104.025.202103.440-462

7. Seliverstova N.A., Zubok Yu.A. Ideas of student youth about the meanings of education: socio-cultural features of self-regulation. Sociological science and social practice. 2023;1(11):44–69. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.19181/snsp.2023.11.1.3

8. Bukin V.P. Socialization of youth in modern Russian society: regional aspect. News of higher educational institutions. Volga region. Humanities. 2009;1(9):122–130. (In Russian).

9. Agarkova L.V., Ostapenko E.A. Improving the quality of human resources in the region through the development of the education sector. Vestnik universiteta. 2024;8:55–62. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.26425/1816-4277-2024-8-55-62

10. Ivanova M.V., Klyukina E.S. Modern prerequisites for the future of the Arctic labor resources. Public opinion monitoring: Economic and social changes. 2017;6:180–198. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.14515/monitoring.2017.6.08

11. Sharova E.N., Burtseva A.V. Current demographic situation in the Kola North: on the issue of human presence in the Arctic. Theory and practice of social development. 2020;1(143):68–73. (In Russian).

12. Sharova E.N., Nedoseka E.V. Professional and educational attitudes of young people in the context of migration outflow of the population of the Arctic territories (on the example of the Murmansk region). Arctic and North. 2021;45:166–183. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.37482/issn2221-2698.2021.45.166

13. Mikhailovskaya S.A. Social and philosophical analysis of behavioral strategies of student youth in the field of secondary employment. Medicine. Sociology. Philosophy. Applied research. 2018;4:86–91. (In Russian).

14. Mikhailovskaya S.A. Secondary employment of student youth as a mechanism of professional socialization: social and philosophical analysis. Abstr. Dis Cand. Sci. (Philos.): 09.00.11. Chita: Transbaikal State University; 2019. 22 p. (In Russian).

15. Tsylev V.R. Secondary employment of university students on the way to professional activity. Modern studies of social problems. 2012;4. (In Russian).


Review

For citations:


Sharova E.N., Maleus D.V. Professional and educational orientations of final-year students at regional university (based on empirical research). Vestnik Universiteta. 2025;(4):230-239. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.26425/1816-4277-2025-4-230-239

Views: 32


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 1816-4277 (Print)
ISSN 2686-8415 (Online)