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Guardian article

This week, the University of Manchester announced plans to guarantee every undergraduate some form of real-world work experience before graduation, signalling something much bigger than a curriculum redesign. It may represent a fundamental shift in what universities believe a degree is actually for.

For generations, elite universities—particularly those within the Russell Group—have defended higher education as intellectual formation rather than vocational training. A degree was meant to cultivate critical thinking, analysis, communication, and intellectual independence.

But the economic reality facing graduates has changed dramatically.

Students now leave university with debts often exceeding £50,000, entering one of the most competitive graduate labour markets in decades. Many graduates struggle to secure professional employment and increasingly find themselves underemployed in roles that historically did not require degrees. Employers, meanwhile, continue to complain about “skills gaps” and lack of workplace readiness.

Against this backdrop, Manchester’s proposal feels less radical and more inevitable.

A Degree Plus Experience

Vice-chancellor Duncan Ivison argued that no student should spend three years engaged solely in academic study. Instead, every student should have the opportunity to contextualise their learning through placements, internships, employer projects, exchanges, or community engagement.

Importantly, this model applies equally to humanities and STEM subjects.

That matters because employers consistently report valuing transferable skills such as communication, creativity, collaboration, adaptability, and critical reasoning—precisely the capabilities many degrees already develop. The problem is often not the absence of these skills, but graduates struggling to demonstrate them convincingly.

Experience provides evidence.

A history student who has completed a museum placement or policy project suddenly has a narrative connecting academic abilities to practical application. Structured work experience becomes the bridge between intellectual capability and employability.

The Hidden Inequality Problem

Manchester’s proposal also addresses a quieter issue within graduate recruitment: access.

Prestigious internships and professional opportunities are often easier to secure for students with family networks, financial support, or existing social capital. Universities embedding work experience directly into degree structures may therefore help level the playing field.

Manchester explicitly stated that opportunities should not depend on “personal contacts” — a significant acknowledgement of how unequal graduate access can be.

However, scale remains a challenge. As Nick Hillman noted, coordinating meaningful placements for more than 30,000 undergraduates is a major logistical undertaking. Many students are already balancing paid work alongside study because of rising living costs. Adding additional placements without careful integration risks increasing pressure rather than reducing it.

The AI Era and the Value of Human Skills

Manchester’s move also reflects a wider transformation accelerated by artificial intelligence.

As AI automates more routine cognitive tasks — drafting, summarising, coding assistance, data analysis — the labour market increasingly rewards distinctly human capabilities: judgement, communication, creativity, collaboration, and adaptability.

Experiential learning develops precisely these attributes.

Placements force students to navigate ambiguity, institutional cultures, deadlines, teamwork, and practical problem-solving in ways difficult to replicate entirely within lectures or seminars.

This is where platforms such as my-thesis.org become particularly relevant.

One of the growing challenges for graduates is not simply possessing skills, but making those skills visible. Traditional CVs often struggle to communicate qualities such as communication ability, intellectual confidence, public engagement, or interdisciplinary thinking.

Short-format academic presentations — such as Three Minute Thesis competitions — provide direct evidence of those capabilities. They showcase not only subject expertise, but the ability to explain complex ideas clearly, think under pressure, communicate persuasively, and engage wider audiences.

By indexing and making these presentations searchable, my-thesis.org effectively creates a public-facing portfolio of graduate communication and research skills. In an increasingly competitive labour market, this gives students something far more dynamic than a transcript alone: demonstrable evidence of intellectual and professional capability.

In many ways, platforms like my-thesis.org complement the same shift Manchester is recognising — the move away from degrees as static credentials and toward graduates as visible, verifiable demonstrations of applied skill.

Beyond Employability

Reducing universities purely to workforce preparation would still be a mistake. Universities are civic and intellectual institutions, not simply employment factories.

But Manchester’s proposal is significant because it attempts to fuse intellectual development with real-world application rather than treating them as opposites.

The old divide between “academic” and “vocational” education is beginning to collapse. The future university may increasingly be defined not only by lectures and examinations, but by ecosystems connecting scholarship, communication, public engagement, workplace experience, and applied learning.

The question students increasingly ask is no longer simply: “What did I learn?”

It is: “How can I show what I’m capable of doing?”

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Man at podium

If you’ve been watching the rapid rise of AI and wondering whether human skills still matter, the data brings a refreshing reality check: communication remains the single most in-demand skill in the workforce.

A recent analysis of nearly 2 million job postings by Aura Intelligence, a workforce analytics platform, found that communication topped the list across every major industry. And this isn’t just a hiring preference — it’s an economic necessity. According to Axios HQ, ineffective communication costs U.S. businesses $2 trillion every year.

So even as AI reshapes our workflows, automates tasks, and transforms entire professions, strong communication has never been more essential. On my-thesis.org, where we celebrate real researchers and real expertise, this insight matters: the future belongs to those who can explain ideas clearly, persuade effectively, and connect authentically.

AI Is Growing — and Making Human Skills More Valuable

AI is accelerating fast. Tools that once felt futuristic — from large language models to automated data visualization — are becoming part of daily work across sectors. But this technological leap has created an interesting paradox:

The more powerful AI becomes, the more valuable human communication skills are.

A Wiley Workplace Intelligence survey of more than 2,000 professionals revealed that 80% believe soft skills are more important than ever because of AI’s evolution. And importantly, the report highlights what AI still can’t do:

“A bot doesn’t know that your colleague has been caring for an ailing family member… or that your boss is doing the job of three people.”

AI can process data, summarize information, even generate content — but it cannot read a room, understand context, or offer empathy. These gaps make human communication irreplaceable.

Why Communication Matters Even More in 2025 and Beyond

Here’s what today’s research and market data are telling us:

Communication builds trust

Teams function on relationships, not algorithms. Humans need clarity, empathy, and nuance — especially when decisions carry emotional or ethical weight.

Communication drives leadership

As AI handles technical complexity, meetings, negotiations, and decision-making rely even more on leaders who can communicate clearly and responsibly.

Communication unlocks the value of technical skills

You can master AI or cloud systems — but those skills only matter when you can explain insights, persuade stakeholders, and collaborate effectively.

Communication protects the bottom line

With trillions lost to miscommunication, organizations are prioritizing people who can translate ideas into action and avoid costly misunderstandings.

What This Means for Students, Researchers, and Professionals

The future job market will reward:

  • Clear speakers
  • Thoughtful listeners
  • Effective writers
  • Insightful presenters
  • Empathetic collaborators

In other words: the core skills behind every 3 Minute Thesis presentation and every research story shared on my-thesis.org.

As AI grows more capable, your ability to communicate what you know — not just what you can produce — becomes your competitive edge.