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Title What can Students Get from a Software Engineering Capstone Course?
Authors Cecilia Bastarrica, Daniel Perovich, Maira Marques
Publication date 2017
Abstract For the last ten years we have been teaching a
capstone course for fifth year students of the Computer Science Department
of the Universidad de Chile. Five year ago we redesigned the course,
shifting from projects following a waterfall process and focused on
technical aspects, to one centered in soft skills following agile practices.
Since then, we provide out
students a concrete learning outcome: to internalize how relevant is having
and developing critical soft skills to succeed in projects. Last year, we
wondered whether our students were actually getting what we declared. We
conducted a survey on students' initial and final perception about the
relative value and difficulty of different dimensions involved in their
projects: technical challenge, teamwork, planning, and negotiation with the
client. Also, we applied a one-tailed dependent pair sample t-test to
determine the statistical significance of the surveys result. We found out
that the relative value of soft skills grows while that of the technical
challenge drops, and that the students find that planning and teamwork are
harder than they expected. Also, we found statistically significant evidence
that, for the soft skills we have measured, the perceived relative relevance
actually changes throughout the course.
Pages 137-145
Conference name ACM/IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering
Publisher ACM Press (New York, NY, USA)
Reference URL View reference page