학술논문

How Does a Student-Centered Course on Communication and Professional Skills Impact Students in the Long Run?
Document Type
Conference
Source
2020 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE) Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2020 IEEE. :1-9 Oct, 2020
Subject
Engineering Profession
Computer science
Education
Teamwork
Software engineering
STEM
Meteorology
Guidelines
student-centered learning
longitudinal study
mixed methods
qualitative content analysis
communication
professional skills
Language
ISSN
2377-634X
Abstract
This Full Paper in the Research-To-Practice Category presents a long-term study about the effects of a student-centered course on communication and professional skills on students’ thoughts, attitudes, and behavior. The course is offered at a European university as part of a computer science master’s program. This paper shares the design and challenges of a longitudinal study that reaches ten years behind and employs a mixed-methods approach. Besides presenting and interpreting the findings, we shed light on which features tend to stay on students’ minds and impact their way of being and acting in society. Moreover, we suggest implications for the design and practice in comparable courses to maximize constructive, sustainable effects, such as improved active listening, presentation skills, and openness to other perspectives. These are essential (not only) for computer science professionals. Our findings suggest that the course provided significant learning for the vast majority of respondents, including aspects such as presenting while keeping the other side in mind, managing one’s stress, and becoming less shy to speak up. All in all, we aim to contribute an evidence-based source of motivation for instructors in technically focused curricula who hold a student-centered stance.