Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths
This study aimed to provide insights on the perceptions of engineering students from two educational paths in Singapore of desired graduate attributes by employers. Research questions: (1) Do graduates from the polytechnic and junior college paths have similar perceptions with regard to the rankin...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1453362023-03-11T20:06:42Z Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths Lee, Chien-Ching Chin, Soo-Fun School of Humanities Humanities::General Educational Paths Employability Skills This study aimed to provide insights on the perceptions of engineering students from two educational paths in Singapore of desired graduate attributes by employers. Research questions: (1) Do graduates from the polytechnic and junior college paths have similar perceptions with regard to the ranking of desirable graduate attributes? (2) If not, in what ways are their perceptions different? Literature review: A review of literature on employers’ ranking of desirable graduate attributes revealed mismatches in employers’ and graduates’ rankings. There has not been any published study on student awareness of employability skills in Singapore in particular. Hence, this study investigated the perceptions of final-year engineering students from two different educational paths of their ranking of graduate attributes. Methodology: The students were asked to rank eight attributes and explain their ranking from an employer’s perspective. Results: The findings show that communication, teamwork, and problem-solving were ranked the top three desirable attributes by both groups of students. However, polytechnic students seem to reflect greater familiarity and confidence in tackling workplace requirements compared to junior college students. The implications of the findings are presented. Accepted version 2020-12-17T07:11:34Z 2020-12-17T07:11:34Z 2016 Journal Article Lee, C.-C., & Chin, S.-F. (2017). Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, 60(1), 42-55. doi:10.1109/TPC.2016.2632840 0361-1434 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145336 10.1109/TPC.2016.2632840 1 60 42 55 en IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication © 2016 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works. The published version is available at: https://doi.org/10.1109/TPC.2016.2632840 application/pdf |
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Humanities::General Educational Paths Employability Skills Lee, Chien-Ching Chin, Soo-Fun Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths |
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This study aimed to provide insights on the perceptions of engineering students from two educational paths
in Singapore of desired graduate attributes by employers. Research questions: (1) Do graduates from the polytechnic
and junior college paths have similar perceptions with regard to the ranking of desirable graduate attributes? (2) If not,
in what ways are their perceptions different? Literature review: A review of literature on employers’ ranking of
desirable graduate attributes revealed mismatches in employers’ and graduates’ rankings. There has not been any
published study on student awareness of employability skills in Singapore in particular. Hence, this study investigated
the perceptions of final-year engineering students from two different educational paths of their ranking of graduate
attributes. Methodology: The students were asked to rank eight attributes and explain their ranking from an
employer’s perspective. Results: The findings show that communication, teamwork, and problem-solving were ranked
the top three desirable attributes by both groups of students. However, polytechnic students seem to reflect greater
familiarity and confidence in tackling workplace requirements compared to junior college students. The implications of
the findings are presented. |
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School of Humanities |
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School of Humanities Lee, Chien-Ching Chin, Soo-Fun |
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Article |
author |
Lee, Chien-Ching Chin, Soo-Fun |
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Lee, Chien-Ching |
title |
Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths |
title_short |
Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths |
title_full |
Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths |
title_fullStr |
Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths |
title_full_unstemmed |
Engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths |
title_sort |
engineering students' perceptions of graduate attributes : perspectives from two educational paths |
publishDate |
2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145336 |
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1761781864026079232 |