Differences in accounting students’ perceptions of their development of professional skills : a South African case

Item

Title
Differences in accounting students’ perceptions of their development of professional skills : a South African case
Description
PURPOSE : The purpose of this paper is to explore differences in South African accounting students’ perceptions of professional skills developed in an undergraduate accounting program. South Africa has a history of socio-economic inequality and racial injustice, leading to factors outside the classroom impacting educational outcomes. In particular, South African classes are heterogeneous, reflecting a diversity of race and language groups and students from differing schooling backgrounds. These differences necessitate differentiated instruction.
DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH : To explore for differences in perceptions, data were collected via questionnaires and differences between demographic variables such as school, race and language were considered, while controlling for gender. A focus group was also hosted to further explore findings. FINDINGS :

Students from better quality schools agreed less strongly than those from poorer quality schools that the education program developed their professional skills. Students from better quality schools may have developed some of the professional skills during their schooling, requiring less to be developed at university. African students, though, agreed less strongly than white students from similar quality schools that they had developed professional skills. A focus group suggested that African students place less emphasis on professional skills development than on technical skills, given their lack of exposure to professional skills through mentors (parents, teachers, etc.) who never developed professional skills during their own compromised education under Apartheid.
ORIGINALITY/VALUE : Understanding the differences in the perceptions of professional skill development in a heterogeneous classroom can assist instructors in adopting differentiated instruction approaches to enable all students to develop professional skills. It could also assist future employers of these graduates to differentiate their development strategies during workplace training.
https://www.emerald.com/insight/publication/issn/2042-3896
hj2020
Accounting
Auditing
Creator
Kirstein, Marina
Coetzee, Stephen
Schmulian, Astrid
Publisher
Date
2020-02-19T10:24:46Z
2020-02-19T10:24:46Z
2019-02
Type
Postprint Article
Format
application/pdf
Identifier
Kirstein, M., Coetzee, S. and Schmulian, A. (2019), "Differences in accounting students’ perceptions of their development of professional skills: A South African case", Higher Education, Skills and Work-Based Learning, Vol. 9 No. 1, pp. 41-59. https://doi.org/10.1108/HESWBL-04-2018-0051.
2042-3896
10.1108/HESWBL-04-2018-0051
http://hdl.handle.net/2263/73425
Language
en
Rights
© 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited
Item sets
Accounting