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An analysis of the professional preferences and choices of computer engineering students
Author(s) -
Kabakus Abdullah Talha,
Senturk Arafat
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
computer applications in engineering education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.478
H-Index - 29
eISSN - 1099-0542
pISSN - 1061-3773
DOI - 10.1002/cae.22279
Subject(s) - graduation (instrument) , c4.5 algorithm , computer science , mathematics education , undergraduate student , engineering management , medical education , machine learning , psychology , engineering , naive bayes classifier , mechanical engineering , medicine , support vector machine
Abstract The revelation of the preferences and choices of students is critical for understanding which areas of the discipline they aim. Especially for final‐year undergraduate students, job prospects are an important concern. In this study, the graduation project choices of the final‐year undergraduate students in the department of computer engineering were investigated in light of their impact on both the industry and academia. A total of 1,693 course grades of 94 final‐year undergraduate students were retrieved from the Student Information System. These course grades were utilized as the features of the employed machine learning algorithms alongside the features that were deduced from them. In addition, the popularities of the graduation project topics on both GitHub and IEEE were investigated to reveal their impact on the industry and academia. To this end, we proposed an experimental study, using 14 machine learning techniques, that predicts the topics of the graduation projects that the final‐year undergraduate students chose. According to the experimental results, the accuracy of the proposed model was calculated to be as high as 100 % when it was utilized with the Bayes Net, Kleene Star , or J48 algorithm. This experimental result confirms the efficiency of the proposed model. Finally, the insights gained from the data are discussed to shed light on the reasons for the choices of the graduation projects as well as their relationships with the courses.