Framework to Maintain Specialisations in a General Degree Structure: An Economical High-Value Degree Structure

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Framework to Maintain Specialisations in a General Degree Structure: An Economical High-Value Degree Structure
Language: English
Authors: Daw, Tony de Souza, Falah, Ahm, Fahd, Kiran, Parvin, Sazia, Di Serio, Antony
Source: Online Submission. Jun 2022 3(2):109-124.
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 16
Publication Date: 2022
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Descriptive
Education Level: Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
Descriptors: Specialization, Academic Degrees, Undergraduate Students, Higher Education, Student Certification, Majors (Students), Qualifications, Education Work Relationship, Costs, Labor Force Development, Holistic Approach, Benchmarking
ISSN: 2723-746X
2722-8592
Abstract: Structuring a degree is a common activity for course developers. Analyzing appropriate subjects and year levels, establishing pre- and co-requisite, and benchmarking against similar degrees are common academic activities. However, the degree structure itself has not had significant changes until now. A degree often lacks flexibility and cohesion and arguably may even lose the main concept of making students highly skilled in the selected labor market more employable. After examining different degree structures, approaches, and employability incentives, we identified a degree structure that can divide each subject into components. Subjects' learning activities, tutorials, and assessments are tailored to align more closely with employment skills. We then proposed breaking all subjects into components relative to year levels, such as majors, minors, streams, and more. This sub-division of work can be performed to any degree. Particular advantages come with a general degree with standard core units and majors--creating learning activities closer to the major and offering students a more robust academic scaffold of their subjects. In addition, higher Education providers benefit by having a cost-efficient degree with minimum overhead to pass the benefits onto students. We discussed several examples from engineering, business, and information technology. Showing how learning opportunities can be divided per degree and subjects into degrees, majors, streams, and specializations. Students studying this framework will have developed skills firmly built on each other, enabling specialization in employment careers and academically. Closing the gap between employment and graduation.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2022
Accession Number: ED620742
Database: ERIC
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