Events that lead university students to change their major to Information Systems: A retroductive South African case

Shortage of computing skills is a global concern as it affects national development and business success. Yet, despite high job availability and high salaries in computing professions, insufficient numbers of students are choosing to study the various computing disciplines. This South African study...

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Main Authors: Lisa Florence Seymour, Thabang Serumola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: South African Institute of Computer Scientists and Information Technologists 2016-07-01
Series:South African Computer Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://sacj.cs.uct.ac.za/index.php/sacj/article/view/367
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spelling doaj-490b559a45d04211882793e483de1a312020-11-25T02:16:08ZengSouth African Institute of Computer Scientists and Information TechnologistsSouth African Computer Journal1015-79992313-78352016-07-0128110.18489/sacj.v28i1.367147Events that lead university students to change their major to Information Systems: A retroductive South African caseLisa Florence Seymour0Thabang Serumola1University of Cape TownUniversity of Cape TownShortage of computing skills is a global concern as it affects national development and business success. Yet, despite high job availability and high salaries in computing professions, insufficient numbers of students are choosing to study the various computing disciplines. This South African study looks at the Information Systems (IS) major which is misunderstood by high school students. This retroductive case study identifies the events which lead students to change their major to IS. The study confirms the importance of interest in a major as well as the perceived high value of a major, which feature as dominant factors in the literature. Yet these are not the initial events that lead to students changing their major to IS. Events that initiate the process include losing passion for a previous major, experiencing difficulty in a previous major as well as enjoying the introductory IS course. The paper has practical advice for IS Departments and argues for a generic first year for students as well as a focus on enjoyment and skills aligned to IS professional practice in introductory IS courses. These findings can be generalised to other majors and, hence, the theoretical contribution adds to the literature on career choice in general.http://sacj.cs.uct.ac.za/index.php/sacj/article/view/367ICT skills, Information systems careersIS majorcomputing curricula
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lisa Florence Seymour
Thabang Serumola
spellingShingle Lisa Florence Seymour
Thabang Serumola
Events that lead university students to change their major to Information Systems: A retroductive South African case
South African Computer Journal
ICT skills, Information systems careers
IS major
computing curricula
author_facet Lisa Florence Seymour
Thabang Serumola
author_sort Lisa Florence Seymour
title Events that lead university students to change their major to Information Systems: A retroductive South African case
title_short Events that lead university students to change their major to Information Systems: A retroductive South African case
title_full Events that lead university students to change their major to Information Systems: A retroductive South African case
title_fullStr Events that lead university students to change their major to Information Systems: A retroductive South African case
title_full_unstemmed Events that lead university students to change their major to Information Systems: A retroductive South African case
title_sort events that lead university students to change their major to information systems: a retroductive south african case
publisher South African Institute of Computer Scientists and Information Technologists
series South African Computer Journal
issn 1015-7999
2313-7835
publishDate 2016-07-01
description Shortage of computing skills is a global concern as it affects national development and business success. Yet, despite high job availability and high salaries in computing professions, insufficient numbers of students are choosing to study the various computing disciplines. This South African study looks at the Information Systems (IS) major which is misunderstood by high school students. This retroductive case study identifies the events which lead students to change their major to IS. The study confirms the importance of interest in a major as well as the perceived high value of a major, which feature as dominant factors in the literature. Yet these are not the initial events that lead to students changing their major to IS. Events that initiate the process include losing passion for a previous major, experiencing difficulty in a previous major as well as enjoying the introductory IS course. The paper has practical advice for IS Departments and argues for a generic first year for students as well as a focus on enjoyment and skills aligned to IS professional practice in introductory IS courses. These findings can be generalised to other majors and, hence, the theoretical contribution adds to the literature on career choice in general.
topic ICT skills, Information systems careers
IS major
computing curricula
url http://sacj.cs.uct.ac.za/index.php/sacj/article/view/367
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