
Rosanne English on Graduate Skills for Computing Students
- E3
- 42:50
- September 4th 2025
What do employers want from Computer Science students and how good are Universities in producing graduates with what employers need? We spoke to Rosanne English at the University of Strathclyde about her paper co-authoed with Alan Hayes Towards Integrated Graduate Skills for UK Computing Science Students published at UKICER. From the abstract:
In preparing computing science students for industry, degree content often focuses on technical skills such as programming. Such skills are essential for a successful post-study career in industry and is popular with students. However, industry notes that students are often limited in what can be referred to as graduate attributes or transferable skills. Such skills include effective teamwork, communication, and critical thinking amongst others. Similar gaps have also been demonstrated for computing science students more specifically, resulting in industry developing their own training programmes for graduates. To address this issue, graduate attributes could be incorporated more readily into computing curricula. Within the UK this is discussed in accreditation requirements as well as higher education frameworks. However, research which aims to explore how to achieve this is still comparatively limited. Building on existing work in this area, this paper presents a thematic analysis of graduate attributes at Russell Group Universities in the UK to identify the most common attribute themes, and uses the most frequent themes to begin to consider how these could be more readily embedded in CS curricula.
Show notes and transcript for this podcast can be found at uki-sigcse.acm.org/2025/09/03/episode-3
The Rest Is Teaching
Welcome to The Rest is Teaching, a podcast for computing education researchers and practitioners. In this podcast we'll meet people who are changing the way we teach Computer Science from school through to University and beyond. What is Computer Science anyway? Why should people learn it and how can we improve the way it is taught?
Join your host, Duncan Hull, and meet people who are tackling these important issues as they teach the next generation. What is their teaching practice and research? Why is it important and how can their insights be useful to other people teaching computing in any areas of education and at any level. Listen or subscribe wherever you get your podcasts or go to uki-sigcse.acm.org/podcast
This podcast has been supported by funding from the Council of Professors and Heads of Computing. cphc.ac.uk