Marina Milosheva
marina milosheva

Marina Milosheva

Student Experience

Biography

Marina Milosheva is a PhD student in the Centre for Social Informatics at the School of Computing.

Her ESRC-funded doctoral study focuses on young people's career decision-making and career information literacy skills. This research is conducted in collaboration with the Scottish Graduate School of Social Sciences (SGSSS) and Scotland's leading skills agency, Skills Development Scotland (SDS).

Marina’s director of studies is Dr Peter Cruickshank. Her second supervisor is Dr Peter Robertson, and her third supervisor is Hazel Hall.

Date


13 results

The role of information in career development

Journal Article
Milosheva, M., Robertson, P., Cruickshank, P., & Hall, H. (2021)
The role of information in career development. Journal of the National Institute for Career Education and Counselling, 47(1), 12-20. https://doi.org/10.20856/jnicec.4703
The role of information in career development has received relatively little research attention. A literature review completed as part of a doctorate in the first half of 2021...

The socio-material nature of careers work: An exploration of knowledge co-creation amongst career practitioners

Presentation / Conference
Milosheva, M., Hall, H., Robertson, P., Cruickshank, P., & Lyall, C. (2021, March)
The socio-material nature of careers work: An exploration of knowledge co-creation amongst career practitioners. Poster presented at iConference 2021, Beijing, China
While knowledge co-creation is a main source of innovation in organisations, little is known about the co-creation of knowledge in career settings, particularly in the context...

The socio-material nature of careers work: an exploration of knowledge co-creation amongst career practitioners

Conference Proceeding
Milosheva, M., Hall, H., Robertson, P., Cruickshank, P., & Lyall, C. (2021)
The socio-material nature of careers work: an exploration of knowledge co-creation amongst career practitioners. In iConference 2021 Poster Proceedings
While knowledge co-creation is a main source of innovation in organisations, little is known about the co-creation of knowledge in career settings, particularly in the context...

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