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An investigation of software engineering curricula

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Abstract

We adapted a survey instrument developed by Timothy Lethbridge to assess the extent to which the education delivered by four UK universities matches the requirements of the software industry. We propose a survey methodology that we believe addresses the research question more appropriately than the one used by Lethbridge. In particular, we suggest that restricting the scope of the survey to address the question of whether the curricula for a specific university addressed the needs of its own students, allowed us to identify an appropriate target population. However, our own survey suffered from several problems. In particular the questions used in the survey are not ideal, and the response rate was poor.

Although the poor response rate reduces the value of our results, our survey appears to confirm several of Lethbridge's observations with respect to the over-emphasis of mathematical topics and the under-emphasis on business topics. We also have a close agreement with respect to the relative importance of different software engineering topics. However the set of topics, that we found were taught far less than their importance would suggest, were quite different from the topics identified by Lethbridge.

Acceptance Date Mar 15, 2004
Publication Date Feb 1, 2005
Journal Journal of Systems and Software
Print ISSN 0164-1212
Publisher Elsevier
Pages 325 - 335
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2004.03.016
Keywords software engineering curricula, survey methods
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2004.03.016

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