Graduates of the Bachelor degree programme in Human Resource Management can demonstrate that they have achieved the following learning outcomes, the programme qualifications:
- Graduates of the programme describe a selection of current (international) HR theories and concepts in a cohesive manner. They substantiate the choices made in this selection and use it to solve the HR issue in the organisation.
- Based on a selected research paradigm, graduates consistently apply the following steps in the research cycle: formulating an objective after completion of a problem analysis, writing a theoretical framework, concluding this framework with a guiding question and choosing a suitable research method. These steps are carried out consistently and students are transparent about the choices they have made in the process.
- Based on a selected research paradigm, graduates consistently apply the following steps in the research cycle: developing one or more measurement tools, collecting data and performing an insightful analysis of this data to obtain results, and drawing conclusions from these results which correspond to the formulated question. These steps are carried out consistently and students are transparent about the choices they have made in the process.
- Graduates assess the value of research-related and practical knowledge on the basis of practical usability, reliability and validity.
- Analysis: graduates analyse an (advisory) issue and the internal and external context in which this issue exists. They use various business and HR models and concepts to this end and produce an accepted problem definition.
- Advising: graduates issue a well-founded recommendation to improve a problem situation, taking into account the internal and external context and providing implementation considerations and guidelines that accompany this recommendation.
- Written communication: graduates clearly communicate concepts, ideas and opinions in writing, taking into account the intended reader(s) of the text in their approach and formulation.
- Oral communication: graduates clearly communicate concepts, ideas and opinions orally, taking into account the intended recipient(s) of the message in their approach and formulation; they are able to gain support for their ideas with arguments and enthusiasm.
- Determining results: graduates make proposals to evaluate recommendations in a result-oriented manner within the relevant context, and use measurable indicators to this end.
- Graduates identify professional ethical dilemmas and devise alternative courses of action based on ethical decision models.
- Graduates recognise patterns in their own behaviour and systematically think about and reflect on this, up to the level of their personal beliefs and professional identity. They translate this reflection into areas for development.