3 research outputs found

    Perceptions of Information Communications Technology Education: A Supply-Side Case of Malaysian Private Education

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    The shortfall of workers for the Information Communication and Technologies (ICT) industry has prompted the need to better understand factors contributing to the decline of enrolments in this field at the tertiary education level. Most of previous research examining these factors have been conducted within Western contexts with less attention paid to the decline of enrolments within Asia. In this study, we attempt to address this gap and understand the factors that encourage and discourage enrolment in information technology (IT) undergraduate studies amongst Malaysian students. In an interpretative study, focus-groups were conducted with 61 undergraduate students enrolled in an IT undergraduate degree program at a large Malaysian private university. Our results indicate that encouragement from the participants’ immediate social contacts was the primary factor encouraging enrolment in IT studies. We found that role models have a strong influence in encouraging enrolment in IT education amongst Malaysian students. The evident influence of social factors and social influencers is highlighted in our study, reflecting the collectivist influence that drives Malaysian students’ intentions to pursue IT education at the tertiary education level. The implication for universities and industry is the need to create awareness and educate students’ immediate social contacts about ICT careers

    Storing, caring and sharing : examining organisational practices around material stuff in the home

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    Homes are a much discussed, but little empirically examined resource for action. Material stuff at home offer resources for social, organisational and individual activities that we routinely encounter and use on an everyday basis. Yet their purposes, storing and sharing practices of use and roles in social and organisational actions are hardly touched upon within Human Computer Interaction (HCI) and Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) academic literature. As a consequence of this, there are critical gaps in understanding home organisation and management methods as a means of informing the design of novel technologies. This thesis is an examination of everyday routines in home, paying particular attention to tidying, storing, retrieving and sharing practices. To examine these practices at home, this thesis presents a combination of two qualitative studies using ethnographically oriented methods. Study one (Home’s Tidying up, Storing and Retrieving) concerns the topic of home storage in practice; investigating how householders create and use domestic storage practices and the methods used to manage their storage at home. Study two (Social Interaction around Shared Resources) concerns social interaction around shared resources, and the methods used to manage sharing practices at home. Semi-structured interviews, fieldwork observation, tour around a home, and a photo diary were undertaken to produce a ‘rich’ description of how householders collaborate in storing and sharing set of practices to manage their everyday routines. Several key finding emerged from the research, that are used to identify important implications for design of home organisational technologies, for example to support effective lightweight interactions, providing user controlled mechanism to make different levels of privacy protection for family members, offering effective awareness of family communications and notifications of the activities of other people around these organisation systems, and making available a range of flexible options for family members to access a shared resource. The thesis make the case that flexible systems should be designed allowing people to categorise things in different ways, and have the values of home asserted in technologies, considering factors such as emotion around the use of space in home organisation to make homes become the unique places that they are understood to be.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
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