Value Correlations Of Business Information Competencies In Graduate And Undergraduate Studies

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Donald Caputo
Jessica Schreiner

Keywords

Computer business skills, Graduate IT education, Employer-defined skills, IT curriculum

Abstract

Previous research studies have noted that university students at both the graduate and undergraduate levels are concerned that they do not have the necessary career skills to make the transition from college student to corporate employee, and equally concerned about which specific skills open the door of corporate opportunity. This research study attempts to find which Business Information Skills are relevant to student concerns and whether the educational community is fulfilling their needs. Additionally, the second phase of the study will compare the correlation of the initial findings in regard to the educational status of the student, either graduate or undergraduate. In other words, does the greater employment diversity and job-oriented promotion-intensive outlook of the graduate student result in a different set of views on needed career skills than the undergraduate student. Initial information was derived from surveys of a discrete selection of the corporate community in southwestern Pennsylvania, which resulted in the matrix of employer desired business skills. Relative information was garnered from graduate and undergraduate student surveys at Robert Morris University, which resulted in an essential student overview of perceived essential business skills. All surveyed students were engaged in one or more of the various Computer Systems programs at the university. Doctoral Information Science programs were not included in the survey. The timeframe of the study, on an ongoing basis, encompasses the period from 2005 to mid-2008.

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