Employability skills of accounting students: What do their CVs tell us?

Abstract This study highlights the priorities of accounting students’ employability skills in enhancing their employability opportunities by analyzing self-reported skills through their curriculum vitae (CVs). This study also examines whether pre-graduation work experience and participation in train...

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Main Author: Fahd Taha Haidar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2025-06-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-04991-w
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author Fahd Taha Haidar
author_facet Fahd Taha Haidar
author_sort Fahd Taha Haidar
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description Abstract This study highlights the priorities of accounting students’ employability skills in enhancing their employability opportunities by analyzing self-reported skills through their curriculum vitae (CVs). This study also examines whether pre-graduation work experience and participation in training courses contribute to the development of these employability skills. Employability skills examined included both soft and hard skills. Accounting students were asked to self-identify their acquired skills (i.e., self-reporting) by listing them in their CVs. The results showed that accounting students prioritized 17 skills deemed essential for employability, with the highest-ranked being computer use, Microsoft Office proficiency, communication skills, English language proficiency, and the ability to work under pressure. The findings also revealed that the pre-graduation work experience and participation in training courses had varying influences on the development of employability skills. There were no statistically significant differences in the importance of either skill group (hard or soft) between students with pre-graduation work experience and those without. However, a significant difference was found between students who had taken training courses and those who had not. Additionally, the results of additional analysis confirmed that factors beyond work experience and training courses—such as activities embedded within academic courses—likely influence employability skills development. This study contributes to the growing debates on students’ perspectives on the priority of employability skills for career success. It also offers the potential practical implications for higher education institutions (HEIs), suggesting that they can better support students by fostering the development of employability skills through curricular and extracurricular activities, including pre-graduation work experience and training course participation. The role of curricular and extracurricular activities during students’ education is likely to form a significant frame of reference through which they understand the connection between their experience in HEIs and their future prospects in the labor market.
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spelling doaj-art-a808a668ad96442e85214bde5050c0b52025-08-20T02:35:40ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922025-06-0112111210.1057/s41599-025-04991-wEmployability skills of accounting students: What do their CVs tell us?Fahd Taha Haidar0Department of Accounting, College of Business Administration, Majmaah UniversityAbstract This study highlights the priorities of accounting students’ employability skills in enhancing their employability opportunities by analyzing self-reported skills through their curriculum vitae (CVs). This study also examines whether pre-graduation work experience and participation in training courses contribute to the development of these employability skills. Employability skills examined included both soft and hard skills. Accounting students were asked to self-identify their acquired skills (i.e., self-reporting) by listing them in their CVs. The results showed that accounting students prioritized 17 skills deemed essential for employability, with the highest-ranked being computer use, Microsoft Office proficiency, communication skills, English language proficiency, and the ability to work under pressure. The findings also revealed that the pre-graduation work experience and participation in training courses had varying influences on the development of employability skills. There were no statistically significant differences in the importance of either skill group (hard or soft) between students with pre-graduation work experience and those without. However, a significant difference was found between students who had taken training courses and those who had not. Additionally, the results of additional analysis confirmed that factors beyond work experience and training courses—such as activities embedded within academic courses—likely influence employability skills development. This study contributes to the growing debates on students’ perspectives on the priority of employability skills for career success. It also offers the potential practical implications for higher education institutions (HEIs), suggesting that they can better support students by fostering the development of employability skills through curricular and extracurricular activities, including pre-graduation work experience and training course participation. The role of curricular and extracurricular activities during students’ education is likely to form a significant frame of reference through which they understand the connection between their experience in HEIs and their future prospects in the labor market.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-04991-w
spellingShingle Fahd Taha Haidar
Employability skills of accounting students: What do their CVs tell us?
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
title Employability skills of accounting students: What do their CVs tell us?
title_full Employability skills of accounting students: What do their CVs tell us?
title_fullStr Employability skills of accounting students: What do their CVs tell us?
title_full_unstemmed Employability skills of accounting students: What do their CVs tell us?
title_short Employability skills of accounting students: What do their CVs tell us?
title_sort employability skills of accounting students what do their cvs tell us
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-04991-w
work_keys_str_mv AT fahdtahahaidar employabilityskillsofaccountingstudentswhatdotheircvstellus