Skills for employability: Identification of the Soft Skills required in engineering education

In a context of increased competition on the job market, soft skills have become as important as the technical skills for employability of Moroccan engineers. Reactive and innovative engineering schools orient their learning process towards the job market requirements. This study aims at examining t...

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Main Authors: CHAIBATE Hind, BAKKALI Soumia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: amaquen 2017-08-01
Series:The Journal of Quality in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.amaquen.org/index.php/joqie/article/view/5
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spelling doaj-2fd8cbb466984fb18c34a42e3fa107332020-11-25T03:06:13ZengamaquenThe Journal of Quality in Education2028-18972017-08-017910.37870/joqie.v7i9.53Skills for employability: Identification of the Soft Skills required in engineering educationCHAIBATE Hind0BAKKALI Soumia1ENSEM- Hassan II University of CasablancaENSEM- Hassan II University of CasablancaIn a context of increased competition on the job market, soft skills have become as important as the technical skills for employability of Moroccan engineers. Reactive and innovative engineering schools orient their learning process towards the job market requirements. This study aims at examining the soft skills required by accreditation bodies in some developing countries, namely ABET (The Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology), ENAEE (European Network for Accreditation of Engineering Education), ABEEK (Accreditation Board for Engineering Education of Korea), JABEE (The Japan Accreditation Board for Engineering Education) et EA (Engineers Australia). These skills are subsequently correlated with the Syllabus of the CDIO initiative founded by MIT (the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) In the United States. This syllabus represents a model of engineering program. It has been developed in collaboration with the industry, the government and the university community. In this study we highlight a set of soft skills which we compared with those developed in Moroccan engineering education programs in order to detect their shortcomings and key success factors.https://journal.amaquen.org/index.php/joqie/article/view/5competitionjob marketsoft skillsinnovative engineering schoolsaccreditation bodies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author CHAIBATE Hind
BAKKALI Soumia
spellingShingle CHAIBATE Hind
BAKKALI Soumia
Skills for employability: Identification of the Soft Skills required in engineering education
The Journal of Quality in Education
competition
job market
soft skills
innovative engineering schools
accreditation bodies
author_facet CHAIBATE Hind
BAKKALI Soumia
author_sort CHAIBATE Hind
title Skills for employability: Identification of the Soft Skills required in engineering education
title_short Skills for employability: Identification of the Soft Skills required in engineering education
title_full Skills for employability: Identification of the Soft Skills required in engineering education
title_fullStr Skills for employability: Identification of the Soft Skills required in engineering education
title_full_unstemmed Skills for employability: Identification of the Soft Skills required in engineering education
title_sort skills for employability: identification of the soft skills required in engineering education
publisher amaquen
series The Journal of Quality in Education
issn 2028-1897
publishDate 2017-08-01
description In a context of increased competition on the job market, soft skills have become as important as the technical skills for employability of Moroccan engineers. Reactive and innovative engineering schools orient their learning process towards the job market requirements. This study aims at examining the soft skills required by accreditation bodies in some developing countries, namely ABET (The Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology), ENAEE (European Network for Accreditation of Engineering Education), ABEEK (Accreditation Board for Engineering Education of Korea), JABEE (The Japan Accreditation Board for Engineering Education) et EA (Engineers Australia). These skills are subsequently correlated with the Syllabus of the CDIO initiative founded by MIT (the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) In the United States. This syllabus represents a model of engineering program. It has been developed in collaboration with the industry, the government and the university community. In this study we highlight a set of soft skills which we compared with those developed in Moroccan engineering education programs in order to detect their shortcomings and key success factors.
topic competition
job market
soft skills
innovative engineering schools
accreditation bodies
url https://journal.amaquen.org/index.php/joqie/article/view/5
work_keys_str_mv AT chaibatehind skillsforemployabilityidentificationofthesoftskillsrequiredinengineeringeducation
AT bakkalisoumia skillsforemployabilityidentificationofthesoftskillsrequiredinengineeringeducation
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