Relevance of Communicative, Team Effectiveness, and Long-Range Planning Skills in Vessel Crewmembers

Use this link to cite
http://hdl.handle.net/2183/36540
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Collections
Metadata
Show full item recordTitle
Relevance of Communicative, Team Effectiveness, and Long-Range Planning Skills in Vessel CrewmembersAuthor(s)
Date
2023Citation
Bouzón, R., Antón-Sancho, Á., Amado-Sánchez, Y., & Vergara, D. (2023). Relevance of communicative, team effectiveness, and long-range planning skills in vessel crewmembers. International Journal of Instruction, 16(2), 965-984. https://doi.org/10.29333/iji.2023.16251a
Abstract
[Abstract] In recent years, soft skills have become increasingly important in many areas of
the labor market and in the training of higher education students. This paper
explores the perception that different crewmembers of Spanish flag vessels have
about the influence of different soft skills in their work environment. A quantitative
study is developed based on the answers to a survey to assess the different soft
skills. The study involved 120 crewmembers of Spanish vessels, representing all
possible positions and all types of coastal or ocean-going vessels. Student's t-test
and ANOVA test were used to compare mean perceptions by gender, age range,
navigation experience, position held, position experience, navigation class and
vessel type. Three families of soft skills are distinguished: (i) communicative skills,
(ii) team effectiveness, and (iii) long-range planning skills. In all of them,
participants gave very high ratings, especially in team effectiveness. Significant
differences were also identified in the perception of communicative skills and
long-range planning skills when differentiated by position held and in the
perception of communicative and teamwork skills when differentiated by type of
vessel.
Keywords
Soft skills
Vessel
Crew
Survey
Quantitative study
Marine engineering
Vessel
Crew
Survey
Quantitative study
Marine engineering
Editor version
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)