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Skills Transferability using e-portfolios A study of first year economics skills application Muna Simatele & Nick Tsitsianis

Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

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Skills Transferability using e-portfolios. A study of first year economics skills application Muna Simatele & Nick Tsitsianis. Rationale and Motivation. Increased interest in acquisition of employable skills in graduates UH strategic driver 3 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

A study of first year economics skills applicationMuna Simatele & Nick Tsitsianis

Page 2: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Rationale and MotivationIncreased interest in acquisition of employable skills in graduates• UH strategic driver 3

“Our students will acquire the transferable skills necessary to prepare them to make an effective contribution as graduates in their chosen fields” UH strategic plan 2010-2015

• Employability as a curricula process (HEA)

Employability derives from the ways in which the student learns from his or her experiences. Yorke, 2006 ( learning and employability)

Page 3: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Describing the skills (1)• ‘a set of achievements – skills, understandings and personal

attributes - that make graduates more likely to gain employment and be successful in their chosen occupations, which benefits themselves, the workforce, the community and the economy.’ Yorke ( 2006)– Employability skills therefore refer to a set of generic skills and

characteristics that allow an individual to both secure and sustain employment and make progress in the workplace (UK CES, 2010)

– Subject specific skills– Generic skills

Page 4: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Describing the skills (2)• CIHE/HEA mapped skills/competencies

i. Cognitive Skills/Brainpower: The ability to identify, analyse and solve problems

ii. Generic Competencies: High-level and transferable key skills such as the ability to work with others in a team, communicate, persuade and have interpersonal sensitivity.

iii. Personal Capabilities: The ability and desire to learn for oneself and improve one’s self-awareness and performance

iv. Technical Abilityv. Business and / or Organisation Awarenessvi. Practical Elements

Kubler and Forbes (2005)

Page 5: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Description of study• First year economics students on skills module• Map the desirable skills to what can actually be taught in class

( see attached list of class topics)• Encourage Reflection and self development• Focus group discussions (3), • Anonymous written feedback

Page 6: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Embedding the skills development Describe a set of skills à la Kubler and Forbes (2005)

i. Semester A, lecture in teamwork, presentation, peer assessment and actual presentations

ii. All semester B work using specific case studies to analyse and find solutions

iii. Personal Capabilities: Reflection logsiv. Technical Ability- computer skills both semester A and Bv. Research into actual topics (oil prices, the budget,

education)vi. Most of semester B work

Page 7: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

skills academic year 2010/ 2011 Academic year 2011/2012

Semester A Semester B Semester A Semester B

Learning styles/what economists do

x application x

Basic data presentation X application X

Writing skills X application X

Working in teams X application X

Presentation skills X application X Application

Graphing skills X application X application

Critical reading and writing X application X

Analysis and evaluation application X X

Numeracy X X X

IT literacy X X X

Resource management/information handling

X X X X

Economic Modelling X X X

Interview preparation X

Research design X

Understanding the news X

Working in the global environment

X X

X=taught and some practice embedded application implies that the skill was not directly taught but used and reinforced in the context of some economic application.

Page 8: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Embedding the skills development cont’d • Lectorials on skills• Labs for hands on practice, downloading data form sources,

transforming data to convey a message and analysing it• Google sites for reflection and development

– Each skill to be reflected upon in terms of previous knowledge, acquired knowledge and possible application. After a month a follow up reflection

– Reflections were assessed, not heavily, Marks awarded for demonstration of application across modules, learning and social situations

• Essays for assessing writing skills• Group presentations to develop and asses communication and

presentation skills• Final module project to show case all skills learnt

Page 9: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Why e-portfolios?• The e-portfolio is the central and common point for the

student learning experience… It is a reflection of the student as a person undergoing continuous personal development, not just a store of evidence (JISC 2008)

• E portfolios promote active learning and reflection• They are learner centred and flexible • Allows the inclusion of social space in the learning sphere and

vice versa• Essentially encourages portability of skills and experience!!!

Page 10: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Analysis2 main approaches• Student survey on excel skills and their transferability. • Review of activity on e-sitesResults presented as• Frequencies• Probit models

Page 11: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Empirical analysis- transferability of skills(survey results)

• PRELIMINARY FINDINGS:• 51 LEVEL 4 STUDENT SURVEYED, 25% FEMALES 75% MALES• AGE RANGE: 19-21 (ONLY 3 STUDENTS WERE 22 AND ABOVE)• 61% OF THE STUDENTS DESCRIBED THEMSELVES AS “WHITE” AND 39%

OF THE STUDENTS SORTED THEMSELVES INTO A PARTICULAR “NON-WHITE” GROUP

• 80% OF THE STUDENTS WERE BORN IN THE UK, 20% WERE BORN ABROAD

• BUT, 88% OF THE STUDENTS STUDIED IN THE UK FOR THEIR A-LEVELS• 92% OF THE STUDENTS SAY THAT THEY ACTIVELY USE THE SKILL MODULE

INTO OTHER MODULES• 84% OF THE STUDENTS SAY THAT THEY ACTIVELY USE WHAT THEY HAVE

LEARNT IN OTHER MODULES INTO THE SKILL MODULE

Page 12: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Empirical analysis- factors influencing engagement and transferability of skills• DEPENDENT VARIABLE: HOW INTENSE ARE YOU APPLYING

THE SKILL MODULE TO OTHER MODULES?• 1: Very Little, 2: Little, 3: Average: 4: High, 4: Very High• ORDERED PROBIT ESTIMATES

EXPLANATORY VARIABLES COEF. T-RATIO

MALE -0.304 -0.79WHITE -0.460 -1.25AGE 0.041 0.56BORN IN BRITAIN 0.746 1.10A-LEVELS IN BRITAIN 0.293 0.36ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE OF EXCEL 0.946 3.81***ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE OF INTERNET -0.259 -1.19

Page 13: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Empirical analysis- factors influencing engagement and transferability of skills

• IT APPEARS THAT THE ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE OF EXCEL IS THE DECISIVE FACTOR THAT PROMOTES TRANSFERABILITY OF SKILLS.

• THERE IS EVIDENCE THAT THE FEMALES AND THE NON-WHITES TEND TO ENGAGE MORE HEAVILY WITH THE TRANSFERABILITY OF SKILLS. HOWEVER, THIS EVIDENCE IS NOT STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT.

• BORN OR EDUCATED IN BRITAIN APPEARS TO BOOST THE TRANSFERABILITY OF SKILLS, BUT AGAIN THE EVIDENCE IS NOT STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT

• ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE OF INTERNET (ACCESSING AND PROCESSING DATA) TENDS TO SUPPRESS THE TRANSFERABILITY

Page 14: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Empirical analysis- transferability of skills• DEPENDENT VARIABLE: HOW INTENSE ARE YOU APPLYING

THE OTHER MODULES TO SKILL MODULE?• 1: Very Little, 2: Little, 3: Average: 4: High, 4: Very High• ORDERED PROBIT ESTIMATES

EXPLANATORY VARIABLES COEF. T-RATIO

MALE -0.067 -0.18WHITE -0.122 -0.33AGE 0.058 0.81BORN IN BRITAIN 1.062 1.53A-LEVELS IN BRITAIN -0.164 -0.20ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE OF EXCEL 0.754 3.23***ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE OF INTERNET -0.313 -1.46

Page 15: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Empirical analysis- factors influencing engagement and transferability of skills

• IT APPEARS THAT THE ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE OF EXCEL IS THE DECISIVE FACTOR THAT PROMOTES TRANSFERABILITY OF SKILLS-AGAIN

• THERE IS EVIDENCE THAT THE FEMALES AND THE NON-WHITES TEND TO ENGAGE MORE HEAVILY WITH THE TRANSFERABILITY OF SKILLS. HOWEVER, THIS EVIDENCE IS NOT STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT-AGAIN

• BORN BRITAIN APPEARS TO BOOST THE TRANSFERABILITY OF SKILLS, BUT EDUCATED IN BRITAIN HAS THE OPPOSITE EFFECT. HOWEVER, THE EVIDENCE IS NOT STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT

• ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE OF INTERNET (ACCESSING AND PROCESSING DATA) TENDS TO SUPPRESS THE TRANSFERABILITY -AGAIN

Page 16: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Survey of the e sites(prelim)• Engagement

–Number of words 65%(A) 83(B)–Quality of work 77%(A) 58%(B)–Transferability to other modules (42%)–Transferability to/from other modules

Page 17: Skills Transferability using e-portfolios

Where to from here?• Students will continue with sites as level 5- further review?• Complete the econometric analysis to show links between engagement

and other factors• Develop wider application to other UH modules

– Assessment– Skills portability– engagement