Efficacy of Flipping the College Career Planning Course -- A Finance Career Planning Course


  •  Huiling Peng    
  •  Yahui Shih    

Abstract

This study investigates the effectiveness of applying the flipped classroom teaching model to career planning courses in colleges and its efficacy on students’ learning satisfaction and career planning. This study samples 52 first-year university students and 56 first year junior college student. The purpose is to identify and improve the deficiency in the application of flipped classrooms to career planning courses under different academic systems at colleges, so as to enhance benefits to students. In addition, this study adopts the Learning Satisfaction Questionnaire as the assessment tool. The statistical analysis and the research findings suggest that in general, older students (with an average age of 18) in the first year of the four-year technical program are more satisfied with the teaching model of flipped classrooms than younger students (with an average age of 15) in the first year of the five-year junior college program. The teaching model of flipped classrooms has differing effects on students in different academic systems. Based on the research findings, for 4-year technical program freshmen, after taking the flipping career planning course it is about 92% of students have personal specialty-oriented career planning; for first-year junior college students, after taking the flipping career planning course it is about to 86% of students have personal specialty-oriented career planning. This paper develops suggestions for the application of flipped classrooms to the teaching of career planning courses to college students. It serves as a template for the promotion of flipped classroom teaching in higher education for specialty-oriented career planning courses in colleges. 



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