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Cite or link to this item using this URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10182/3883

Title: The computing skills expected of business graduates: a New Zealand study
Author: Gibbs, Shirley
McKinnon, Alan E.
Date: Aug-2009
Publisher: Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS).
Item Type: Conference Contribution - Paper in Published Proceedings
Abstract: A survey of employers in New Zealand was undertaken to test the expectation that new graduate employees will possess a good level of computing skills given they have completed a university qualification. We are now in a time where a series of generic skills are required of any graduate entering the workforce. These generic type skills include good communication skills, problem solving abilities and the often not asked for but assumed computer literacy. There is evidence from the literature to suggest that these assumptions are not exclusive to New Zealand. Results indicate that employers are finding they have to lower their expectations to fit with the computing skills university graduates are bringing to the workforce. This gap in skills is seen by some as handicapping the ability for employers to recruit suitable graduates.
Description: Published in the Proceedings of the Fifteenth Americas Conference on Information Systems, San Francisco, California August 6th-9th 2009.
Persistent URL (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10182/3883
Related: The original publication is available from AIS Electronic Library.
Related URI: http://aisel.aisnet.org/amcis2009/628
Rights: Copyright © The Authors.
Appears in Collections:Department of Applied Computing

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