Just watched a hilarious item on News 24 this morning on a new course which has been launched to teach IT geeks basic social skills. The programme has been developed after research conducted by e-skills a government funded body, found that employers are complaining that many IT graduates are incapable of developing relationships with colleagues and clients.
The survey found that more than 30 per cent of UK employers say there are problems recruiting IT graduates with business skills and 40 per cent claim there is a shortage candidates with strong interpersonal skills. The new course is being pioneered at Oxford Brookes and will be rolled out to 13 other universities around the country. Software company Micro Focus is working closely on the development of the course and is generating some great PR coverage today, so kudos to their agency Brands2Life.
I couldn’t find many details on exactly how social skills will actually be developed among IT geeks but a mentor scheme with local businesses will be part of it. Perhaps in conjunction with limiting private broadband access to seven hours a week?
Do you need to get out more? From Times Online:
- Are your CDs arranged in order of record label?
- Do you make notes in more than one colour?
- When you finally got a girlfriend, did you start looking for her mouse?
- Do most of your friends’ names include @?
- Are your socks embroidered with the day of the week?
- Would you be surprised to hear this also comes in a paper-only format?
- Are you in a chess club?
- Do you alternate between Pizza Hut and Dominos so that you can have a balanced diet?
- Is your only item of sportswear bicycle clips?
- Did you ask for your money back because Trainspotting was only about drugs and sex?
If you said “yes” 8-10 times
If you said “yes” 4-7 times :/
If you said “yes” 1-3 times
If you said “yes” no times, it may be of interest for you to know that the signs above are called emoticons and look a bit like faces if you tilt your head sideways










