Implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates

The paper examines the implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates. The study adopted a sequential, mixed research strategy, starting with in-depth interviews of teachers and managers in industry, followed by a structured questionnaire involving 200 students select...

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Main Authors: Omer Ibrahim, Sonal Devesh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Deakin University 2019-11-01
Series:Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/861
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spelling doaj-f817837f64664c9687307e87ec8a283f2020-11-25T02:54:17ZengDeakin UniversityJournal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability1838-38152019-11-0110212213510.21153/jtlge2019vol10no2art861751Implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduatesOmer Ibrahim0Sonal Devesh1College of Banking and Financial StudiesCollege of Banking and Financial StudiesThe paper examines the implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates. The study adopted a sequential, mixed research strategy, starting with in-depth interviews of teachers and managers in industry, followed by a structured questionnaire involving 200 students selected randomly from two colleges in Muscat. The statistical approach included exploratory factor analysis (EFA), and parametric tests. The study found that public speaking anxiety is widespread among students in higher education institutions in Oman, with a prevalence rate amounting to 55 percent, much higher compared to the rates reported globally. The main factors involving public speaking anxiety in these education institutes in Oman were attributed to self-confidence, foreign language anxiety, being unprepared or fear of talking in a foreign language, lack of experience, or forgetfulness/loss of memory. The implication of public speaking anxiety on employability of graduates in Oman is identified and some suggestions made based on the findings.https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/861public speaking anxietyemployability skillsexploratory factor analysisoman
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Omer Ibrahim
Sonal Devesh
spellingShingle Omer Ibrahim
Sonal Devesh
Implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates
Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability
public speaking anxiety
employability skills
exploratory factor analysis
oman
author_facet Omer Ibrahim
Sonal Devesh
author_sort Omer Ibrahim
title Implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates
title_short Implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates
title_full Implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates
title_fullStr Implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates
title_full_unstemmed Implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates
title_sort implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of omani graduates
publisher Deakin University
series Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability
issn 1838-3815
publishDate 2019-11-01
description The paper examines the implication of public speaking anxiety on the employability of Omani graduates. The study adopted a sequential, mixed research strategy, starting with in-depth interviews of teachers and managers in industry, followed by a structured questionnaire involving 200 students selected randomly from two colleges in Muscat. The statistical approach included exploratory factor analysis (EFA), and parametric tests. The study found that public speaking anxiety is widespread among students in higher education institutions in Oman, with a prevalence rate amounting to 55 percent, much higher compared to the rates reported globally. The main factors involving public speaking anxiety in these education institutes in Oman were attributed to self-confidence, foreign language anxiety, being unprepared or fear of talking in a foreign language, lack of experience, or forgetfulness/loss of memory. The implication of public speaking anxiety on employability of graduates in Oman is identified and some suggestions made based on the findings.
topic public speaking anxiety
employability skills
exploratory factor analysis
oman
url https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/jtlge/article/view/861
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