Essential Non-Technical Skills for Software Engineering and Engineering Science Graduates: A Case Study from North Cyprus

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Penerbit Uthm

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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Abstract

This quantitative descriptive study examines key non-technical (soft) skills influencing the employability of software engineering and engineering sciences graduates in North Cyprus. A total of 50 stakeholders-comprising university lecturers, industry experts, postgraduate students, recent graduates, and job seekers- participated in a structured survey featuring 57 items across nine skill frequencies, standard deviations) revealed that skills such as leadership, brainstorming, professionalism, responsibility, planning, and empathy received mean scores above 3.5 on a 5-point scale, demonstrating strong perceived importance in recruitment processes. Findings underscore a notable gap in current engineering curricula regarding non-technical skills training. To address this, we advocate for the systematic integration of soft-skills development into university programs and recommend enhanced partnerships between academia and industry to improve workforce readiness.

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Software engineering education, non-technical competencies, graduate employability, soft skills, engineering curriculum, North Cyprus

Journal or Series

Journal of Technical Education and Training

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Volume

17

Issue

4

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