Industry requirements for and competence of engineering graduates a study
Shodhganga@INFLIBNET
View Archive InfoField | Value | |
Title |
Industry requirements for and competence of engineering graduates a study
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Contributor |
Mahajan, P Mani
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Subject |
Gandhian studies
Engineering education Skill Gap Engineering Graduate Competencies Non-technical Skills Survey Kerala State Bridging Skills Gap |
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Description |
The problem of skills mismatch between the entry level engineers and the industry needs is universal in nature and India is no exception to this. The present study aimed to address the issue of the industry requirements for and competence of engineering graduates taking Kerala state under a sample survey. The study adopted cluster sampling with sample components comprising three categories namely engineering students, students selected on campus interviews and employed category. In total, 571 subjects were selected drawn from different branches of study such as Information Technology (IT), Electronic and Communication Engineering (ECE) and Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) belonging to 8 Engineering colleges in the Kerala State coming under different universities. The study has been supplemented by views and opinions, suggestions collected from the doyen experts, educationists, legislators and industry personnel through scheduled interviews. The study gave a wider coverage to the global literature and Indian studies as well for the identification of the problem, methodology, instruments and recommendations. Data were collected through standardized test instruments for measuring the Competency of engineering graduates with the parameters that included Logical thinking, Numerical Ability, Engineering Aptitude, Verbal Reasoning, Speed, Emotional Intelligence and team work (Least Preferred Coworker) identified as Employability skills. The first four come under Differential Aptitude Test and the Least Preferred Co worker revealing that of the team work. The time and specific instructions regarding each test were given to the respondents well in advance. The entire questionnaire set was served one after another and respondents were made to sit at a stretch and answer fully. The formulated set of hypotheses was tested with the collected data. Correlation matrix could reveal the relationship among the variables representing the skills.
Bibliography p.246-260,Appendix include |
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Date |
2013-11-26T08:04:08Z
2013-11-26T08:04:08Z 2013-11-26 n.d. January 2011 n.d. |
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Type |
Ph.D.
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Identifier |
http://hdl.handle.net/10603/13243
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Language |
English
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Relation |
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Rights |
university
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Format |
260p.
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Coverage |
Gandhian studies
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Publisher |
Kottayam
Mahatma Gandhi University School of Gandian Thought and Development Studies |
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Source |
INFLIBNET
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