<pre>The CSEET conference is returning to Carnegie Mellon University once again<br>where it started 15 years ago.<br>Advances in technology and communications enable new applications to be both<br>conceived and made feasible every day. The implication of this is a<br>continuous demand for highly skilled software engineers. However, there is a<br>marked skills shortage occurring both in the IT professions and in<br>engineering: on the one hand students are not entering SE programs in the<br>numbers industry needs and on the other, industry reports graduates are<br>lacking in skills considered important – in the newer technical areas and in<br>business and soft skills. In short, there are gaps to be bridged. In order<br>to provide the profession with appropriately educated individuals with the<br>right skills who are well trained as software engineers, the education and<br>training techniques we currently use, need to change.<br>CSEE&T 2010 will include research and experience paper presentations<br>(including short papers), panel discussions, workshops and tutorials and the<br>Academy for SE Education and Training (ASEE&T). We invite high quality,<br>original papers from all Software Engineering educators, trainers, users and<br>providers, covering the conference theme and related topics. Submissions may<br>address all areas of curriculum development, empirical studies, personal or<br>institutional experiences, conceptual or theoretical work.<br>The program will provide numerous opportunities for academic and industry<br>participants to interact and learn from each other. Join us in exploring how<br>we start to bridge the Academic/Industry divide in SE education and training.<br></pre>
Abbrevation
CSEET
City
Pittsburgh
Country
United States
Deadline Paper
Start Date
End Date
Abstract