Abstract

The rapid development of advanced technology worldwide has promoted an increase in the need for highly skilled engineers who are adept at applying job-related technologies and have engineering competency (ENcom) to gain knowledge and introduce creative solutions. However, little is known about the underlying mechanism of the associations between ICT competencies related to work (ICT-Work) and the ENcom of engineering students. This study sought to examine the role of ICT-Work on ENcom. Based on the literature, self-esteem and self-regulated learning (SRL) were identified as factors that indicate the effect of ICT-Work on ENcom, while gender was identified as a moderator that conditioned these mediated relationships. The sample consisted of 1,313 undergraduate engineering students from eleven universities in Thailand. The results of structural equation modeling (SEM) showed positive direct and indirect effects of ICT-Work on ENcom, self-esteem, and SRL and confirmed that self-esteem and SRL mediate the impact of ICT-Work on ENcom. Moreover, multigroup SEM revealed no gender differences in the factor loadings and structural path coefficients of ICT-Work on ENcom via self-esteem and SRL. To prepare students for their professional lives in the digital world, educational institutions should emphasize the importance of developing engineering students in ICT-Work and the use of advanced ICT involved in the job.

Highlights

  • The digital society and the COVID-19 pandemic have changed the way people live, work, and learn around the world [1,2,3]

  • The dataset used in the analysis of the relationship between ICT competencies related to work, self-esteem, and self-regulated learning with engineering competencies was included as S1 Dataset

  • The results indicated that ICT-Work has a positive direct and indirect relation with self-esteem, self-regulated learning (SRL), and engineering competency (ENcom)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The digital society and the COVID-19 pandemic have changed the way people live, work, and learn around the world [1,2,3]. The workforce has an increasing demand for ICT competencies as a tool for knowledge-seeking, communication, learning, working, and shaping career choices [4, 5]. Basic ICT skills are not specific to the profession; many job profiles in engineering industries increasingly require engineers with good technical expertise [6] and high-level ICT-Work and cross-functional skill capabilities [7] to apply specific software in their profession [8]. Role of ICT competencies related to work on engineering competencies

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call