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Dame Wendy Hall attacks computer science employability 'myth'

Southampton academic says statistics hiding reality for graduates

Published on
November 6, 2014
Last updated
May 27, 2015

The 鈥渕yth鈥 that computer science graduates have poorer employment prospects than those who studied other subjects is damaging the discipline, a House of Lords committee has heard.

Dame Wendy Hall, director of the Web Science Institute at the University of Southampton, criticised the way in which the 糖心Vlog Statistics Agency defines computer science, saying 鈥渁ll sorts of different things鈥 were 鈥漧umped鈥 together under the term.

The Destinations of Leavers of 糖心Vlog survey, published by Hesa, consistently ranks computer science as the subject area in which the highest percentage of students are unemployed after six months 鈥 generating what Dame Wendy described as 鈥渞eally negative press鈥.

鈥淥ur evidence for our students [who studied computer science] is they are absolutely snapped up,鈥 she told the Lord鈥檚 Digital Skills Committee.

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The definition of 鈥渃omputer science鈥 used by Hesa also includes students who study information systems, software engineering, artificial intelligence, health informatics and computer games.

Committee member Lord Macdonald of Tradeston asked whether academia could be judged to be encouraging a lot of courses that did not provide value for money, given that graduates were not finding work, and if it was 鈥渢ime to be radical鈥 and 鈥渃lear out鈥 the computer science courses that were underperforming.

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鈥淚 think we have to unpick the statistics,鈥 Dame Wendy said 鈥 reasoning that if employability for computer science graduates at Southampton was 鈥渘inety something per cent鈥, but the discipline was still ranking bottom of the Hesa analysis, then there must be courses at some universities where 鈥渙nly 20 per cent [of graduates] are employable鈥.

Baroness Joanna Shields, who has worked for Google and Facebook and currently chairs Tech City UK and advises Prime Minister David Cameron on digital matters, was giving evidence to the committee alongside Dame Wendy.

She said the media had 鈥減erpetuated the myth鈥 that computer science graduates were unemployable, which was damaging the competitiveness of such courses.

chris.parr@tesglobal.com

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