Imagine If Every Student Had Access to Real Industry Experience
Imagine If Every Student Had Access to Real Industry Experience
How universities can scale work-based learning without scaling workload Work-based learning can scale when universities move beyond relying only on bespoke placement models and add repeatable, supported industry project pathways. The goal is not to remove the human parts of employability learning. It is to protect them: authentic briefs, feedback, reflection, inclusive access, evidence of skill development and meaningful partner engagement. That is the conversation Practera is taking to the Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026. As the sector asks what the future of careers and employability should look like, one question sits underneath many of the programme themes:How can universities give more students access to real industry experience without adding unsustainable pressure to careers teams, academics or employer partners?
Conference context: Practera will be at Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026 to discuss how universities can scale inclusive, meaningful industry experience through structured live industry projects, supported delivery models and measurable skill development.
What is Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026 about?
Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026 is a higher education conference focused on the future of graduate employability, careers provision and student opportunity. The programme brings together careers and employability leaders, educators, employer-engagement teams and sector partners to discuss future jobs, inclusive careers provision, international students, AI, work-based learning, placements, data and embedded employability. Practera’s contribution sits inside that agenda: how universities can make real industry experience more accessible without adding unsustainable workload. For registration, programme and access details, use the official Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026 page.Practera at Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026
Practera will be at Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026 as a conference participant, parallel-session contributor and awards sponsor. Join our Practera parallel session on Thursday 2 July, 12:15–13:00 in LT2, where we will discuss how universities can make real industry experience more accessible and scalable through structured live industry projects, supported delivery models and evidence of student skill development. Practera is also sponsoring the Inclusivity and Opportunity Award at the Graduate Futures Awards presentation ceremony. That sponsorship reflects a broader belief behind our programmes: access to meaningful industry experience should not depend on a student’s network, location, timetable, confidence or ability to secure a traditional placement. If you are exploring inclusive access, scalable work-based learning or a low-risk pilot for live industry projects, come and speak with us at the conference.Why this question belongs at Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026
The Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026 programme is full of the right signals: future jobs, inclusive careers provision, international students, employer engagement, career confidence, work-based learning, placements, data, AI in guidance, curriculum design and embedded employability. Those themes are connected. For many institutions, they point to one practical design challenge. Students need more than advice. They need chances to practise, reflect and produce evidence of capability. Employers want graduates who can communicate, solve problems and contribute sooner. Careers and employability teams want to widen access without lowering quality. Academic teams want authentic learning that fits curriculum, assessment and workload realities. That is why Practera’s conference question is deliberately practical:Imagine if every student had access to industry experience.Many institutions are already working towards that ambition. The next question is how to design a model that can work for hundreds or thousands of learners, not only a small cohort with unusually strong staff support or employer capacity.
The practical challenge is matching ambition with delivery capacity
Traditional placements remain valuable. They give students exposure to workplace culture, expectations and networks. But placements alone are difficult to scale across every discipline and every student group. The constraints are familiar:- Not enough placement seats for every learner
- High coordination load for careers, placements and academic teams
- Variable employer supervision capacity
- Uneven student access because of work, caring, travel, visa, confidence or network barriers
- Limited evidence of skill development beyond completion or satisfaction
- Difficulty connecting experience to curriculum and assessment
What delivery model lets more students complete meaningful, assessable, industry-connected work without overwhelming the institution?This is where scalable work-integrated learning becomes important.
What do we mean by real industry experience?
Real industry experience does not have to mean every student sitting inside an employer organisation for weeks or months. In higher education, it can include placements, internships, work-integrated learning, work-based learning, live briefs, virtual internships, capstones, employer challenges, consultancy projects and community partner projects. The common feature is authenticity. Students should work on a real or realistic challenge, with a clear stakeholder, meaningful constraints, professional-style deliverables, feedback and reflection. They should leave with evidence they can explain to an employer: what problem they worked on, what skills they practised, what decisions they made and what they learned. For many universities, live industry projects are a practical bridge between traditional placements and classroom-only employability education. They can be short, structured, online or hybrid, discipline-relevant and easier to repeat across cohorts.A better benchmark: access, quality and workload
A scalable employability model has to satisfy three tests at once.1. Access
Can more students take part, including students who may not be able to access traditional placements easily? This includes international students, commuter students, working students, students with caring responsibilities, students with disability, neurodivergent students, first-in-family students and students in disciplines where employer placement supply is limited.2. Quality
Does the experience still build employability skills, not just activity volume? A scalable model needs authentic tasks, clear milestones, learner support, partner input, feedback, reflection and assessment.3. Workload
Can the institution run the model repeatedly without relying on heroic manual coordination? Sustainable scale needs templates, structured workflows, partner-ready briefs, clear communications, analytics, intervention points and delivery support.The practical model: a managed industry project pilot
For conference delegates, the most useful next step may not be a large transformation project. It may be a focused pilot that proves what scalable industry experience could look like in their context. A practical pilot should answer five questions:- Which students need access first?
- What kind of industry or community challenge will feel authentic and manageable?
- What skills should students practise and evidence?
- What support will learners, educators and partners need?
- What data will show whether the model worked?
- A defined student cohort
- A short, clear project timeline
- Real or realistic industry briefs
- Structured learner milestones
- Workshops or guided support
- Feedback loops
- Reflection prompts
- Skills and career readiness evidence
- Practical reporting for the institution
Why AI makes this more urgent
AI is changing graduate work, but it is also changing employability education. Students can use AI to draft, research, summarise, analyse and prototype. But that does not automatically make them employable. They still need to know what to ask, what to verify, what evidence matters, how to collaborate, how to communicate uncertainty and how to apply judgement in context. That is why AI literacy belongs inside authentic work-based learning, not only inside tool training. A student can learn prompting in a workshop. AI-ready employability grows when students use AI responsibly in service of a real brief, then explain their reasoning, evidence and decisions. For careers and employability teams, this creates a double challenge. They need to help students prepare for AI-shaped work while also using scalable models that do not overload staff. Structured industry projects can help with both.
Where Practera fits
Practera for educators helps universities design, deliver and scale experiential learning programmes, including live industry projects, virtual internships, work-integrated learning, work-based learning and employability programmes. The conference banners say it simply: scale real industry experiences across your institution, and scale work-based learning without scaling workload. That matters because the limiting factor is often not ambition. It is delivery infrastructure. Practera supports the parts that make scale possible:- End-to-end programme management services
- Experiential learning delivery platform
- Industry partner and live brief sourcing
- Bespoke learning solutions for diverse learners
- Live feedback, skills tracking and analytics tools
- UK and global experience models
- Templates and repeatable programme structures
A conference checklist for employability leaders
If you are attending Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026, use the conference to test your own institutional model.
Ask:
The answer does not need to be a full institutional redesign. It can start with one cohort, one model and one clear measure of success.
- Which students currently miss out on meaningful work-based learning?
- Which employability experiences depend too heavily on manual coordination?
- Where do employers want to help, but need a lower-friction way to participate?
- Which skills do students need to evidence more clearly?
- Where could live briefs or virtual industry projects complement placements?
- What data would help careers teams, academic teams and senior leaders see impact?
- What pilot could run next term without creating a new workload problem?
Common mistakes to avoid
Mistake 1: Treating access as the same thing as scale
A programme can be technically available to many students and still be hard for many students to complete. Real scale needs inclusive design, clear support and realistic participation models.Mistake 2: Counting opportunities instead of measuring learning
More opportunities do not automatically create better employability outcomes. Students need to practise skills, receive feedback, reflect and produce evidence.Mistake 3: Asking employers to carry the whole learning experience
Employers and community partners are valuable, but they should not be expected to supervise every learner like an employee. A structured model protects partner time while still creating authentic input.Mistake 4: Scaling without delivery infrastructure
If every cohort requires a fresh operational build, the model will struggle. Repeatable templates, workflows, communications and analytics are what make scale sustainable.Mistake 5: Leaving the pilot too vague
A pilot should be small, but not loose. It needs a target cohort, a timeline, success measures, learner support, partner expectations and a clear decision point after delivery.Practical next step for Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026 delegates
If your institution is exploring how to scale work-based learning or industry experience, start with a focused pilot. Practera’s low-cost Practera Pilot gives universities a way to explore what digitally enabled, live industry projects could look like for their students without starting with a large procurement or transformation programme. Use it to test:- Student appetite and completion
- Quality of project experience
- Skills and confidence growth
- Staff workload
- Partner engagement
- Reporting and evidence needs
- Fit with curriculum or co-curricular employability strategy
Ready to test scalable industry experience?
Start with a focused, low-risk pilot that helps your institution explore live industry projects, learner support and measurable employability outcomes. Explore the low-cost Practera PilotConclusion
Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026 is asking the right kind of question: imagine if employability provision could be more inclusive, more connected and more future-facing. Practera’s version of that question is specific:Imagine if every student had access to real industry experience.The answer is not simply more placements, more events or more content. It is a delivery model that protects access, quality and workload at the same time. For universities ready to explore that model, the next step is simple: sign up for the low-cost Practera Pilot through the Educators Portal, meet us at Graduate Futures Institute Annual Conference 2026, or start a conversation about how a structured industry project could work in your context.
