Skip to main content
Article
Effective Evaluation of the Non-Technical Skills in the Computing Discipline
Journal of Information Technology Education: Research
  • Maurice Danaher, Zayed University
  • Kevin Schoepp, Independent Researcher
  • Ashley Ater Kranov, Washington State University Pullman
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2019
Abstract

© 2019, Journal of Information Technology Eucation Research. Aim/Purpose Assessing non-technical skills is very difficult and current approaches typically assess the skills separately. There is a need for better quality assessment of these skills at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. Background A method has been developed for the computing discipline that assesses all six non-technical skills prescribed by ABET (Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology), the accreditation board for engineering and technology. It has been shown to be a valid and reliable method for undergraduate students Methodology The method is based upon performance-based assessment where a team of students discuss and analyze an ill-defined authentic issue over a 12-day period on a discussion board Contribution This is the first published method to assess all six skills simultaneously in com-puting and here it has been trialed with postgraduate students. Findings The results show that the method, though originally designed for undergradu-ates, can successfully be used with postgraduate students. Additionally, the post-graduate students found it to be very beneficial to their learning. Recommendations for Practitioners This method can successfully assess non-technical skills at tertiary level in the computing discipline and it can be adapted to other disciplines. Though de-signed for assessment it has been found to be an ideal method for teaching the skills at both undergraduate and post graduate levels. Recommendations for Researchers Compared with other assessment approaches this method has many advantages: it is a direct method of measurement, it is a rigorous method and it assesses all skills simultaneously Impact on Society Proficiency in non-technical skills is critical for development of knowledge-based economies. This method is a tool to assist in developing these skills. Future Research Researchers can examine how the method benefits students in their context and examine if there are differences between their context and the UAE context presented here. Researchers can work on developing a rubric solely for post-graduate use i.e., to capture the range of levels among postgraduates.

Publisher
Informing Science Institute
Disciplines
Keywords
  • Assessment,
  • Computing education,
  • Employability,
  • Learning outcomes,
  • Transferable skills
Scopus ID

85063293721

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Indexed in Scopus
Yes
Open Access
Yes
Open Access Type
Gold: This publication is openly available in an open access journal/series
https://doi.org/10.28945/4181
Citation Information
Maurice Danaher, Kevin Schoepp and Ashley Ater Kranov. "Effective Evaluation of the Non-Technical Skills in the Computing Discipline" Journal of Information Technology Education: Research Vol. 18 (2019) p. 1 - 18 ISSN: <p><a href="https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/issn/1539-3585" target="_blank">1539-3585</a></p>
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/maurice-danaher/18/