ICT "not cool" enough for high schoolers: Web entrepreneur
- 21 October, 2010 12:08
- Comments 2
The Pearcey Panel. Rob Fitzpatrick, Roger Price, Matt Barrie, Jonathon Wolfe, David Jonas and Gernot Heiser.
The local ICT industry will face a lack of suitable candidates in five years' time unless more high school students start studying ICT, according to Freelancer.com chief executive, Matt Barrie.
Speaking at a NICTA panel discussion in Sydney this week, Barrie said that his experience as an external lecturer at the University of Sydney had indicated less students were enrolling or attending ICT programs.
“The programs are getting worse," he said. "It’s starting at the grassroots bachelor programs. You are seeing enrolment numbers down year-on-year, and the composition of overseas master's students to bachelor's students has been increasing ever so much.”
Barrie said that the types of courses taught have been losing their technical content and becoming “dumbed down”.
“I’ve seen my timetable for next year and my course is moving from 5pm to 7pm with tutorials going to 9pm to cater for the master's students to the detriment of the bachelor's students.”
The lack of PhD students would ultimately come at the detriment of research and disenchanted lecturers, he said.
Despite a recovery in employment in the ICT industry, recruiters and organisations have warned of a looming skills shortage that could be a result of a rise in interest from the financial sector as well as job requirements under the National Broadband Network (NBN).
While ACS chief executive, Bruce Lakin, has dismissed claims of an existing skills shortage, he has said global certification and standards are required to ensure shortages in specific skills areas are not detrimental to the wider industry.
According to Barrie, part of the problem is most lecturers haven’t had a job so they wouldn’t “know how to commercialise anything.”
“Lecturers have very little exposure to the outside world. Something needs to be done with university education and technology.”
The way to combat this, he said, was to get teenagers at high schools interested in ICT.
“There is going to be a huge problem in about four years so we need to start at the high school level and encourage young people to do things like electrical engineering.
“When you see the Facebook movie, The Social Network, everyone is a rock star. That encourages kids in the US to go and study IT but we don’t have anything like that in Australia.”
One program established in universities across Australia sees female high schoolers targeted as potential applicants for future ICT courses and careers.
“We need more people like (Atlassian founder), Mike Cannon Brookes, who is building the next billion dollar software company to list on the ASX and try and build a technology sector here rather than taking it to the US. We need some recent success stories that students can associate with.”
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email Computerworld
- Follow Computerworld on twitter
-
Coalition NBN better or worse?
-
Conroy turns the attack to Hockey
-
CeBIT 2012: Will NBN speed up freight delivery times?
-
Amazon Web Services personalizes CloudFront web hosting service
-
CeBIT 2012: Will NBN speed up freight delivery times?
-
Office 2007 for Dummies
-
Microsoft Office
-
Windows 7 for Dummies®
-
Windows 7 for Dummies® Dvd+book Bundle
-
Computers for Seniors for Dummies, 2nd Edition
-
Windows 7 for Seniors for Dummies®
-
MYOB Software for Dummies 6E Australian Edition
-
Office 2007 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies
-
Teach Yourself Visually Windows 7









Comments
Brian Rivers
Maybe NICTA could start by responding to emails from the constituents they are funded to assist that might be a good place to start.
Visionary
We need people to train in the basics of technology. Many younger people come into the workplace with a superficial understanding of micrprocessors.
Without the basic these young people will struggle to advance past fiddling around with applications. Yes software is the future but it is necessary to understand the impact of poorly built operating systems and applications on the computer hardware. For example computer processor speed is increasing, application performance is lagging.
Post new comment