A global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education

The project experience described in this paper builds upon three years of running global software development projects in an educational setting. It explicitly addresses some of the difficulties we have experienced in the past in getting students to deliver a quality software product at the end of a...

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Main Authors: Olly Gotel, Vidya Kulkarni, Moniphal Say, Christelle Scharff, Thanwadee Sunetnanta
Other Authors: Pace University
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/27496
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spelling th-mahidol.274962018-09-13T14:16:15Z A global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education Olly Gotel Vidya Kulkarni Moniphal Say Christelle Scharff Thanwadee Sunetnanta Pace University University of Delhi Institute of Technology of Cambodia Mahidol University Computer Science Social Sciences The project experience described in this paper builds upon three years of running global software development projects in an educational setting. It explicitly addresses some of the difficulties we have experienced in the past in getting students to deliver a quality software product at the end of a typical semester-long course in which Software Engineering is taught for the first time while a capstone project is concurrently undertaken. The initiative is unique in that it brings undergraduate, graduate and industry students together in a synergistic manner to capitalize upon individual learning needs and prior skill sets. To focus upon quality, coaches and auditors support traditional student teams with critical technical tasks. Working from identical requirements, a five-way competition affords multiple perspectives, improving the requirements, encouraging design diversity and so increasing the likelihood of the client receiving a deployable product. The fact that the development teams are in different geographic locations and that the software is required for a Cambodian client places soft skills entirely at the forefront. One of the software systems developed during this experience was selected by the client and is now successfully deployed in Cambodia. The paper reports on an educational model that has been seen to deliver results. © 2009 IEEE. 2018-09-13T06:34:18Z 2018-09-13T06:34:18Z 2009-07-13 Conference Paper Proceedings - 22nd Conference on Software Engineering Education and Training, CSEET 2009. (2009), 271-278 10.1109/CSEET.2009.36 2-s2.0-67650002374 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/27496 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=67650002374&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Computer Science
Social Sciences
spellingShingle Computer Science
Social Sciences
Olly Gotel
Vidya Kulkarni
Moniphal Say
Christelle Scharff
Thanwadee Sunetnanta
A global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education
description The project experience described in this paper builds upon three years of running global software development projects in an educational setting. It explicitly addresses some of the difficulties we have experienced in the past in getting students to deliver a quality software product at the end of a typical semester-long course in which Software Engineering is taught for the first time while a capstone project is concurrently undertaken. The initiative is unique in that it brings undergraduate, graduate and industry students together in a synergistic manner to capitalize upon individual learning needs and prior skill sets. To focus upon quality, coaches and auditors support traditional student teams with critical technical tasks. Working from identical requirements, a five-way competition affords multiple perspectives, improving the requirements, encouraging design diversity and so increasing the likelihood of the client receiving a deployable product. The fact that the development teams are in different geographic locations and that the software is required for a Cambodian client places soft skills entirely at the forefront. One of the software systems developed during this experience was selected by the client and is now successfully deployed in Cambodia. The paper reports on an educational model that has been seen to deliver results. © 2009 IEEE.
author2 Pace University
author_facet Pace University
Olly Gotel
Vidya Kulkarni
Moniphal Say
Christelle Scharff
Thanwadee Sunetnanta
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Olly Gotel
Vidya Kulkarni
Moniphal Say
Christelle Scharff
Thanwadee Sunetnanta
author_sort Olly Gotel
title A global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education
title_short A global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education
title_full A global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education
title_fullStr A global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education
title_full_unstemmed A global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education
title_sort global and competition-based model for fostering technical and soft skills in software engineering education
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/27496
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