Overview
The success of the employment activity in EEET-2251 has been measured by a Google questionnaire for students, in exam questions (where all options were correct), and by a Kahoot session in the lecture.
The exam questions were answered by 202 students, all those who took the exam. 57% reported the employability material had at least some new issues. The issue of resilience and professional mindset got a strong response with 91% seeing it as very important.
The optional survey was only answered by 74 students where 94% saw soft skills as important and 64% reporting that the lectures made a positive change in their attitude to soft skills. 67% reported that the motivation to learn had been increased because of the soft skills material.
The Kahoot session was joined by approximately 85 students and confirmed that the videos on employability and job interviews and curriculum vitae had a positive effect with 87% saying they would incorporate some of the advice in the video into their CVs.
There have been several other useful outcomes:
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The soft skills video was shown to staff in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering (SECE). This provoked debate and shifted staff attitudes in the direction that soft skills are important to student job prospects. Curriculum planning sessions for the common Design stream in November 2015 have increased the soft skills components.
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EEET-2251 introduced a video assignment where students had to make a four minute job video application as many employers now request. This has resulted in a paper accepted at the AAEE conference in December 2015.
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The work overall resulted in an OLT Seed grant application that was rated as having a good chance of acceptance.
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The employment videos have been incorporated into a purpose-created Google Site on employability that lecturers can easily adapt and deploy in their courses. This may well be used in the first year course Enterprise Engineering in 2016.
Details
EXAM QUESTIONS: the questions and the % responses are shown below.
Q1. In this question ALL answers are correct, but you must make an answer to get the marks, and you must also have properly filled in student details on this exam and the MCQ sheet.
The early lectures talked about employer expectations of graduates and showed a video talking about soft skills. The Video Job assignment required you to make a job application as a short video. How much did this activity help you understand what attributes you must build while here at university?
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20%: There were several important issues I had not understood previously.
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37%: There were a few important issues I had not understood previously.
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17%: I knew all the issues but I learned more about them.
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22%: The assignment reinforced my existing knowledge about these issues.
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4%: I learned nothing in doing this assignment.
Analysis: We are clearly giving valuable new information about employability to about 74% of the class.
Q2. In this question ALL answers are correct, but you must make an answer to get the marks, and you must also have properly filled in student details on this exam and the MCQ sheet.
The later lectures introduced the issue of acting as a pupil or professional. The lecturer stated that the lab program would test your professional mind set. In your opinion how important is it to adopt a professional mindset and to structure courses to encourage this attitude?
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66%: The professional mind set is very important and all students must strive to attain it.
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25%: The professional mindset is important.
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7%: The professional mind set should be left to later years.
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0.5%: It's OK to act as a pupil in a university course.
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1%: The professional mind set does not matter.
Analysis: The professional mindset is seen as very important to 91% of students. This includes self-directed and self-motivated learning.
QUESTIONNAIRE: this was optional and students were asked to go to a Google Form and fill it in. We obtained 74 responses of 202 active students. There were 3 questions as shown below with responses indicated.
Q1. At this point in time what is your opinion of the importance of soft skills to your employability?
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70%: Soft skills are very important to my employability.
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20%: Soft skills are a useful enhancement to my employability.
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4%: Soft skills may make a positive difference to my employability.
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5%: Soft skills are not important to my employability.
Q2. Did the lectures and videos on the topic of employability increase your opinion of the value of soft skills?
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23%: The lectures and videos made a big change and helped me see soft skills as very important.
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41%: The lectures and videos did make a positive change and I now see soft skills as more important.
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28%: I always did see soft skills as important and the lectures and videos just confirmed that.
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8%: I do not see soft skills as that important after seeing the videos and listening to the lectures.
Q3. Has the soft skills and employability material increased your motivation to learn and become a highly competent engineer? (Recall the material on not all graduates get a job, what employers want ...)
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32%: Yes my motivation to learn has increased a lot because of the employability/soft skills material.
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35%: Yes my motivation to learn has increased because of the employability/soft skills material.
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11%: Yes my motivation to learn has increased a little because of the employability/soft skills material.
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22%: The employability/soft skills material does not increase motivation to learn.
A Kahoot session was held by staff in the lecture after students watched an 8 minute video about job interviews and writing a CV. Students were asked several questions and they responded via their mobile phones. Approximately 85 students responded.
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18% of students did not have a CV.
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Only 35% had a fully up to date resume.
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Only 51% felt their resume was effective.
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59% saw soft skills as vital to a job interview
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28% find the video offering surprising advice (as in things the students had not thought of before).
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87% would incorporate some of the advice in the video into their CV and
only 27% did not want to see career development learning in their courses. Of this number, several commented they knew this stuff already and were not keen for everyone to know it!