Career outcomes are one of the major influencing factors when applicants are selecting their course. While theoretically, linking curriculum design closely with career outcomes might be an ideal situation, in practice, ICT curricula are in a constant state of flux and it is unclear whether the specified career outcomes for a course were part of the curriculum (re-)design process. SFIA provides a common reference model to communicate the value and relevance of a course to potential applicants and employers. This paper reports on the application of the ACS process for designing an ICT curriculum that is directly informed by the career outcomes relevant to the local and national ICT industry and the necessary SFIA skill sets to attain those career outcomes. Using this approach we are able to illustrate to employers the capabilities of graduates and provide evidence to applicants that the course relates to the advertised career outcomes.
History
Publication title
Proceedings of the 24th Australasian Conference on Information Systems
Editors
H Deng, C Standing
Pagination
1-10
Department/School
School of Information and Communication Technology
Publisher
ACIS
Place of publication
Melbourne, Australia
Event title
24th Australasian Conference on Information Systems
Event Venue
Melbourne, Australia
Date of Event (Start Date)
2013-12-04
Date of Event (End Date)
2013-12-06
Rights statement
Copyright 2013 The Authors
Socio-economic Objectives
Assessment, development and evaluation of curriculum