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Main Authors: Andree, Kerstin, Berrezueta-Guzman, Santiago, Krusche, Stephan, Pufahl, Luise, Wagner, Stefan
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.21696
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author Andree, Kerstin
Berrezueta-Guzman, Santiago
Krusche, Stephan
Pufahl, Luise
Wagner, Stefan
author_facet Andree, Kerstin
Berrezueta-Guzman, Santiago
Krusche, Stephan
Pufahl, Luise
Wagner, Stefan
contents Soft skills are critical for academic and professional success, but are often neglected in early-stage technical curricula. This paper presents a semi-isolated teaching intervention aimed at fostering study ability and key soft skills-communication, collaboration, and project management-among first-year computer science students. The elective seminar Soft Skills and Tools for Studies and Career in IT was alongside a mandatory team-based programming course. We analyze project outcomes and student experiences across three cohorts across three groups: students who attended the seminar, students who teamed up with a seminar attendee, and students with no exposure to the seminar. Results show that seminar participants performed significantly better in individual presentations and team projects. Qualitative feedback further indicates improved team dynamics and study preparedness. Although self-assessed collaboration and communication did not reach statistical significance, consistent trends suggest that early soft skills training enhances academic integration. We recommend embedding such interventions early in technical study programs to support the transition into university life.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2505_21696
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle How Soft Skills Shape First-Year Success in Higher Education
Andree, Kerstin
Berrezueta-Guzman, Santiago
Krusche, Stephan
Pufahl, Luise
Wagner, Stefan
Computers and Society
Information Theory
Soft skills are critical for academic and professional success, but are often neglected in early-stage technical curricula. This paper presents a semi-isolated teaching intervention aimed at fostering study ability and key soft skills-communication, collaboration, and project management-among first-year computer science students. The elective seminar Soft Skills and Tools for Studies and Career in IT was alongside a mandatory team-based programming course. We analyze project outcomes and student experiences across three cohorts across three groups: students who attended the seminar, students who teamed up with a seminar attendee, and students with no exposure to the seminar. Results show that seminar participants performed significantly better in individual presentations and team projects. Qualitative feedback further indicates improved team dynamics and study preparedness. Although self-assessed collaboration and communication did not reach statistical significance, consistent trends suggest that early soft skills training enhances academic integration. We recommend embedding such interventions early in technical study programs to support the transition into university life.
title How Soft Skills Shape First-Year Success in Higher Education
topic Computers and Society
Information Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.21696