About 40,000 graduates in the country are still unemployed, based on the
2011 Graduate Tracking Study of the Higher Education Ministry.
Ministry
deputy secretary-general (management) Omar Abd Rahman said they
included those who failed to secure permanent jobs six months after
graduation but usually were gainfully employed within two years.
"We
carry out the study yearly and, last year, the percentage of graduates
still unemployed was 21 percent from public institutions of higher
learning, 27 percent from private institutions, 28 percent from
polytechnics and 35 percent from community colleges, he said.
He
was speaking to reporters after the launch of the National LifeLong
Learning Seminar and Carnival (My3L) at the Putra World Trade Centre
today.
Omar said a small group of graduates had started
working part-time as there were no suitable permanent posts for their
qualifications.
Earlier, in his speech, Omar said that this year,
the government through 15 ministries had provide 2,612 courses under
the Lifelong Learning Programme.
He said that to facilitate
members of the public obtain information on the programme, a
national-level Lifelong Learning Programme directory for the 2012/2013
session had been developed and would be launched soon by Higher
Education Minister Mohamed Khaled Nordin.
The My3L Carnival,
carrying the theme "Non-stop Learning", will be held for two days from
today, with 100 booths set up by government agencies and the private
sector.
- Bernama
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