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The chances are that most courses will do something from the listing above but like the stand-alone module, this might have little impact on the course culture. If curricula were to adopt a sufficiency of these strategies then the student experience could be very different. The course would be about the enquiring student, building up knowledge in their chosen subject area but also building self-efficacy. HE would be offering a more complete student experience. Conclusions Future employability is likely to be one of the main reasons why a student will enrol for a particular course (Thomas 2012). The expectation is that alongside a growing subject knowledge will be the development of skills that employers will value. However, the skills that all serious applicants are expected to have, which might be referred to as threshold skills, may put an individual in contention for a post but may well not make a significant difference. Courses might support employability development by such activities as workshops on CV writing or embedded professional development, but all such activities will need to be individualised by the student. The CV may be error free but it may not demonstrate the positive attitude that employers are looking for. The graduate market is competitive and the individual student will need to ‘stand out’. So what makes the difference? The capability to be effective in the workplace is about those unique qualities an individual can bring. The matching to job requirements will involve a process of looking at the likely demands of the role, particularly given the drivers of future change, and articulating the stories that identify the attributes, characteristics and insights that highlight the individual. If HE institutions and courses are to support employability they will need to find ways to allow a student to express their individuality. Given that future work skills are likely to be more esoteric, assessment and delivery strategies will need to reflect this. If sense-making and social intelligence are seen as important then students will need to debate with other students, students will need to understand the perspective of potential employers, students will need to nurture and inspire each other. And the outcome of assessment should be artefacts that evidence employment capability. We need to find opportunities for all students to excel in many different ways. To some extent, this has always been a challenge and the traditional answer will lie with those extra-curriculum activities like involvement with a sports club, part-time work experience or volunteering. These will add to a CV but will this be sufficient given the competitive graduate job market? We are advocating going further. We would like to see individuals make a case that they do have the threshold skills, they do have extra-curriculum activity but also have unique examples of matching labour market requirements like being a creative problem solver, being entrepreneurial, networking, having an artistic eye, being persistent or being resilient. What next? We have undertaken this article as a collaborative experiment - taking it in turns to write, and exchanging emails of the latest version, meeting every three weeks or so to confirm our thoughts and direction, and then writing again. We have so enjoyed working together on this and found it so productive that we have carried on writing. In the next few months we plan to articulate our thoughts about how to design assessment for uniqueness. We want this to be a living discussion and invite you join us and share your examples, ideas and views. Contacts us at [email protected] or [email protected]. We are on a mission! References CBI/NUS (2011) Working towards Your Future: Making the Most of Your Time in Higher Education. At: http://www.cbi.org.uk/media/1121431/cbi_nus_employability_report_march_2011.pdf (Accessed: 10 April 2015) CBI /UUK (2009) Future fit: preparing graduates for the world of work. At: http://www.cbi.org.uk/media/1121435/cbi_uuk_future_fit.pdf (Accessed: 10 April 2015) 47