Trends towards Predictive Mapping of Graduates’ Skills to Industry Roles

View/ Open
Date
2016-01Author
Mwakondo, Fullgence M
Muchemi, Lawrence
Omwenga, Elijah
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Aim: To investigate whether industry roles in the same occupation have similar academic
requirements and establish learning trends in the academia towards occupational industry roles.
Design of Study: Descriptive survey research design was adopted where truism about the
phenomenon under study was arrived at by gathering respondent’s perception about the
phenomenon.
Place and Duration of Study: This study was conducted in the Kenyan software engineering
industry and universities in the academia in the month of May 2016.
Methodology: Perception from 113 employees used as respondents and 24 examinations past
papers from 5 Kenyan universities both in the domain of software engineering were involved. Two experts, a software engineering lecturer and a pedagogy lecturer, were used to extract data from
the exam past papers after their reliability test was confirmed. Both descriptive procedures and
non-parametric tests of hypotheses were conducted using SPSS version 16 software and .05 as
the test limit for significance. A proposed model for mapping graduate’s skills to industry roles was
used as the research model for the study while for academic requirements analyses purposes the
model’s variables were double classified into two dimensions i.e. knowledge or skill type and
domain specific or domain general.
Results: Findings indicate while domain specific knowledge (χ
2
=2.44, P=.87) and skills (χ
2
=1.86,
P=.93) for industry roles in the same occupation are similar, domain general knowledge (χ
2
=13.10,
P=.04) and skills (χ
2
=16.151, P=.01) are significantly different for these industry roles. Further
revelation indicates, while academia trends towards various industry roles within the same
occupation are fairly good for knowledge (80%) and poor for skills (45.7%), trends towards various
industry roles within the same occupation are not uniform among universities.
Conclusion: Academic knowledge and skills requirements for occupational industry roles are not
similar and trends towards occupational industry roles are not uniform among universities.
Therefore, students should select universities that have a higher trending profile for industry roles
in order to increase their employability chances.