1. Introduction
Nowadays, there is a high demand for engineering personnel who obtain not only hard skills, which are theoretical knowledge and practical skills related to a specialty of a person, but also soft skills consisting of communication skills, creative thinking, analytical and managerial skills, and interpersonal skills and qualities. An issue of developing such skills in future engineers arises urgently, as a lot of scientists highlight the relevance of soft skills development according to plenty of surveys studying employers’ requirements for employees [
1,
2,
3,
4]. However, sometimes there is a gap between the employers’ requirements presented in their job advertisements and really demanded skills, as well as a huge variety of soft skills components proposed by scientists and lack of focus on development of soft skills within higher education. For example, scientists reveal how much training at the university contributed to the formation of these skills and come to the following conclusions: discrepancy between the significance of soft skills for graduates and their formation is more than 10%; activities carried out by the university to adapt and socialize the personality of students contributed to the formation of only basic communication skills; only 10% of the study time in universities is devoted to the development of soft skills [
2,
5,
6,
7].
All this confirms the fact that currently, training at the university level is more aimed at the development of professional knowledge and hard skills. As a result, higher school teachers do not exactly understand which soft skills they need to develop in their students and how to do it so as to fulfil employers’ and societal needs. This is especially of high interest for Russian educators, as the topic of soft skills development within Russian higher education is now on the top among researchers. Therefore, there is a need to clarify the concept of soft skills and find useful methods of their development within the higher education.
As long as most scientists consider communication skills and creative thinking basic components of soft skills [
2,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12], engineering foreign language education can allow teachers to develop students’ soft skills with the use of communicative and interactive tasks, which can be implemented within a productive method of teaching a foreign language. The productive method is the method of teaching the foreign language that involves usage of various interactive teaching technologies, electronic educational resources and is aimed at advancing not only foreign language communicative competence, but also interpersonal skills and personal qualities of engineering students [
13], which are also components of soft skills. According to A. Rubtsova, D. Byleva, and other scientists, the productive method implies organization of the educational process considering professional and socio-cultural situations, in which students learn to solve specific practical, research, organizational and communicative tasks, thereby gaining personal experience of self-determination and self-realization. Moreover, the productive method also provides an opportunity to develop students’ skills when working independently in an online format [
13,
14].
The productive method can be applied in engineering foreign language education using the following interactive teaching technologies: case studies [
15], a teaching technology “portfolio” [
16], problem-based learning [
8,
11,
17], discussions and debates, role-playing games, a project method, written tasks related to the future professional activities of students [
18,
19], gamification, storytelling, situational learning [
20,
21] and collaborative learning [
22,
23]. Following the findings of the scientists, we can conclude that the most effective productive technologies for the development of soft skills in engineering foreign language education include the following: (1) case studies; (2) problem-based learning; and (3) essay writing.
First, I. Zueva considers case studies to be the most effective technology to develop soft skills, which the author divides into practical, training and research cases, involving engineering students in research and professional activities through a professionally oriented foreign language. With the use of this technology, the students apply theoretical knowledge of phenomena included in their future profession and use their creativity to solve professional tasks set by the teacher, therefore developing their search and analytical abilities, information presentation skills and also increasing the level of foreign language communicative competence [
15]. The process of solving cases includes the following activities: search for feedback, self-learning and learning from the experience of others; solving special tasks that develop certain competencies and eliminate shortcomings; inclusion in the study of the material through its presentation in the form of a related story by identifying its emotional and personal significance; self-development in the process of work [
24].
The second useful productive technology is problem-based learning which shows its effectiveness in experiments made by different researchers [
17,
25]. In problem-based learning, students are offered a certain situation related to their professional activities, for which it is necessary to prepare a solution and present it in the form of a presentation. In a small group, students independently distribute the roles and the front of work among themselves, which consists of studying the theoretical material on the topic, developing ways to solve the proposed problem, discussing and describing the chosen solution, and ultimately presenting the entire result to other classmates. At the same time, without the use of soft skills and proper interaction, the problem cannot be successfully solved, since each of the group members is responsible not only for their work, but also for the final result [
8]. While finding the solution to the problem, students develop their soft skills, which include creativity, interpersonal qualities, teamwork skills, leadership skills, self-regulation, and time management skills [
11,
26]. Problem-based learning is a more complicated and broader activity in comparison to the case study and requires more time for preparation and solving the problem.
Finally, soft skills imply possessing not only oral, but also written communication skills that can be advanced with the use of essay writing related to the future professional activities of students [
18]. Writing composes of not just knowing the writing strategies for various types of essays, spelling, grammar, and lexical rules; the writing process involves using and developing search and analytical skills, planning skills, and creative and critical thinking. Therefore, writing is also regarded as a productive technique to master soft skills, which are needed for a specialist to be able to conduct business correspondence, prepare written reports and just chat online with colleagues to discuss multiple ideas [
14,
27,
28]. Writing tasks for engineers should include a situation or a problem to solve that will create a challenge for them and motivate them to generate new ideas or innovate existing ones using their creativity and other soft skills [
29,
30]. Moreover, a written task can be made in an online format as information and communication technologies now can simplify both the process of writing, developing technology and numeracy skills of students, and teacher’s evaluation of the work, helping them adapt to educational innovations [
31,
32].
Thus, by developing engineering students’ soft skills within foreign language education, we can master their creativity, which is as important as hard skills due to specifics of engineers’ professional activities. Engineers need to use creative thinking to invent new technologies for society and make breakthroughs to better people’s lives. Having reviewed the literature, we examined how certain interactive technologies can be applied for soft skills development in a higher school, but there was no correlation between the productive method, foreign language teaching and soft skills development, therefore, our research question is to check whether the productive method can be useful for soft skills development in engineering foreign language education. Consequently, the main purpose of our research is to develop a technology of soft skills development based on the productive method which will be applied in engineering foreign language education. To achieve this goal, we had to complete the following tasks:
To study the scientific literature on the topic of the productive method as a basis for soft skills development in engineering foreign language education;
To analyse soft skills implementation in the system of engineering foreign language education;
To carry out a survey studying engineering students’ opinions on the need to develop soft skills and a possibility of their development while learning the foreign language;
To develop components of the technology of engineering students’ soft skills development based on the productive method;
To conduct experimental training and perform statistical analyses of the obtained data in order to prove the efficiency of the technology described in the paper.
2. Materials and Methods
The information for the research was sourced from the review and analysis of the literature concerning the productive method for teaching a foreign language, soft skills development, and usage of productive activities to advance soft skills. For this purpose, diverse scientific papers, articles, and books were scanned. Moreover, we studied several Russian educational standards and CEFR to discover the implementation of soft skills in such acts.
The experimental training was conducted using empirical methods which included the following stages.
1. Conducting a survey: (1) designing a questionnaire to investigate students’ opinions on a need to develop soft skills and a possibility of their development while studying a foreign language; (2) carrying out the survey with the use of the designed questionnaire among engineering students of the 1st–3rd years of education in Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU), Russia. All 192 respondents volunteered to take part in the survey; they were informed about the objective of the study and guaranteed anonymity; (3) finding out the reliability of the questionnaire with the use of SPSS program and Cronbach’s alpha coefficient. The detailed description of design and validation of the survey is presented in the
Section 3.2.
2. Designing the components of the technology using the productive method for developing soft skills in engineering foreign language education. For this purpose, we propose to apply the case study, problem-based learning, and essay writing as the most effective productive activities for soft skills development. Furthermore, we designed assessment criteria for evaluating completion of these tasks and mastering all groups of soft skills, as well as stages of organizing productive activities in engineering foreign language education for the experiment.
3. Quantitative and qualitative research methods: a pedagogical experiment in the experimental group of students. During the preliminary stage of the experiment, we tested the level of students’ soft skills development using the questionnaire developed by the Laboratory of soft skills competencies of Southern Federal University (Rostov-on-Don, Russia) uploaded into the Moodle, which is detailed in
Section 3.3. The initial stage consisted of monitoring the development of soft skills of the participants with the use of the case study, while the intermediate stage was composed of implementing and evaluating the problem-based learning of the students; both stages included the participants’ peer assessment and the teacher’s evaluation of the students’ progress using the designed assessment criteria. At the final stage, the essay writing was implemented to master soft skills, where our assessment criteria and the IELTS Writing band descriptors were used for evaluation. Eventually, we examined the development of soft skills of the students of both the experimental and control groups to conduct further analyses.
4. The quantitative research method: carrying out the data analysis using the descriptive statistical method to critically analyse the findings received. For this purpose, we used the SPSS program version 26.0, where T-statistics was conducted to find out statistical significance between results obtained during initial and final stages of the experiment.
The study took place at Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU), Russia. The survey involved 192 engineering students studying for a Bachelor’s degree in the 1st, 2nd and 3rd years. The participants were all Russian students aged 17–21; 43 of them were female and 149 were male. The experimental training included the engineering students of the 2nd year of education studying the Professionally oriented English language course. Twenty-three students of the experimental group and 22 respondents of the control group, aged 18–20, volunteered to take part in the experiment; they were informed about the objective of the study and guaranteed anonymity.
4. Discussion
The initial stage of our research consisted of analysing the soft skills implementation in the educational standards, namely, the Federal State Educational Standard of Higher Education in Russia, a curriculum of the Bachelor’s program in physics, and the CEFR. Firstly, having analysed the Federal State Educational Standard of Higher Education, we see that Russian higher education is focused on the development of all components of soft skills, which demonstrates orientation of the modern approach to organisation of the educational process in Russia to the development of soft skills. Hence, the soft skills of students can be advanced while receiving their higher education.
Further, we decided to investigate academic disciplines taught in engineering specialties of higher education in Russia and the possibility of developing soft skills in the process of studying them on the example of the curriculum of the Bachelor’s program in physics. Based on the data provided in the curriculum, only 40% of the academic time is allocated for lecture-type classes, respectively, it is necessary to analyse academic disciplines of a practical nature. Among these disciplines, we found the disciplines of mathematical, physical, natural-science modules and the module of profile orientation, which are aimed at obtaining and developing fundamental knowledge and skills that relate to professional skills in a particular field (hard skills), respectively, these disciplines are not aimed at developing soft skills, and the educational process within these disciplines does not always allow the use of interactive pedagogical technologies that contribute to the development of soft skills. At the same time, it should be noted that there is an information technology module that provides an opportunity to develop professional skills that are included in the typology of soft skills, as well as a foreign language learning module that contributes to the development of communication and management skills. Thus, it is worth noting the importance of presence of the foreign language learning module that possesses tools, approaches, and teaching methods that need to be applied to develop soft skills.
Moreover, a professionally oriented foreign language course taught at the university allows students to develop their professional skills by means of a foreign language. To reach this goal, the concept of English-medium instruction (EMI) can be used, which has become the subject of close study recently. EMI considers a foreign language as a means of teaching various disciplines. Scientists from different countries emphasise advantages of using EMI in education, showing that this concept contributes to internationalisation of the society, helps in the implementation of academic mobility, and most importantly provides an opportunity for the development of communication and management skills, creating conditions for active interaction of students. However, EMI is an insufficiently studied phenomenon and has several shortcomings identified by researchers, which are as follows: a low level of foreign language proficiency does not allow students to fully assimilate the material on the taught discipline; the low academic performance of students in the discipline with EMI demotivates them to learn the language; currently a small number of high-quality manuals and courses using EMI are presented [
35,
36,
37]. Nevertheless, this concept is worth further consideration and implementation in the system of engineering personnel training, as it can contribute to the development of soft skills while learning a foreign language.
Speaking about the assessment of soft skills development in a foreign language in the framework of studying foreign language modules at the university, it is necessary to consider the CEFR and the implementation of soft skills in it. The CEFR is a generally accepted system of foreign language proficiency, which includes a description of the competencies that a student must demonstrate by mastering a particular level of a foreign language. In addition to describing well-known communicative competencies, plurilinguistic and pluricultural competencies, the standard describes aspects of language and communication strategies. In the new version of the standard, published in 2020, the authors expanded the descriptors of some competencies and described mediation skills in more detail, thereby emphasizing the need to develop the skills of transmitting information through the interlocutor. At the same time, mediation is presented as a type of speech activity that needs to be taught, and as a communication strategy with which you can learn aspects of the language [
38].
In addition to mediation, the standard presents new descriptors of interactive actions and strategies in the framework of language learning, which confirms the relevance of the development of soft skills. In the context of interactive activities, the student must possess the skills of oral interaction (understanding the interlocutor, communication, conducting formal and informal discussions, purposeful interaction, in-formation exchange, receiving goods and services, interviewing and interviewing skills, using telecommunications), written interaction (correspondence skills, ability to write notes, messages, fill in forms), as well as the authors highlight online interaction, which combines the skills of oral and written interaction in the online space and the skills of targeted online cooperation and conducting transactions. Interactive strategies include changing communication roles, interacting with the other person, and being able to ask the other person for an explanation. Moreover, this standard emphasizes that inter-personal interaction is the source of language and the basis of learning in general [
38].
Therefore, it can be seen that not only employers pay attention to the necessity of possessing soft skills, but also modern Russian educational standards and international educational standards of language learning are starting to change their attitude towards soft skills, and now they implement competencies and descriptors for their assessment focusing on soft skills. Thus, the soft skills development must be performed within the higher education and foreign language learning.
Consequently, the first stage of our experiment included designing the survey on the investigation of the students’ opinions on the need to develop the soft skills and the possibility of their development while studying the foreign language, which is presented in
Table 2. Having conducted the survey, we can conclude that most of the students (27.6% agreed and 38.5% completely agreed) are aware of the relevance of soft skills development. The vast majority of respondents think that soft skills are necessary to possess when applying for a job (33.9% agreed and 47.9% completely agreed) and to have prospects for rapid career progress (28.6% agreed and 54.7% completely agreed). Therefore, we see confirmation of scientists’ research regarding the importance of soft skills development. Furthermore, a lot of engineering students think that they should develop their soft skills while getting higher education (35.9% agreed and 32.8% completely agreed). This is the confirmation of the demand for constructing methods for soft skills development with the use of techniques that academic disciplines can provide teachers with.
Speaking about the academic disciplines that can contribute to soft skills development, plenty of students declared that they are not sure if the technical disciplines help develop their soft skills (30.7%) and that the social and humanitarian disciplines, including foreign languages, contribute to it (39.6% agreed and 30.2% completely agreed), thus sustaining the results of our analysis of the disciplines taught in engineering specialties of higher education in Russia. Nevertheless, quite a huge amount of the respondents agreed (27.1%) and completely agreed (26%) with the statement about the technical disciplines that can testify possible implementation of ways of soft skills development which teachers of the technical disciplines must use. Moreover, we suppose that the technical disciplines can facilitate advancing the group of professional skills within soft skills, which include numeracy skills, technology skills, and some personal qualities connected to the group of management skills.
Regarding engineering foreign language education, the students proved our notion of effectiveness of productive technologies usage for mastering soft skills. Most of the respondents positively reflected on the usage of dialogues and discussions in the foreign language for communication skills development (24.5% agreed and 45.3% completely agreed) and the usage of a project method, solving cases and role-playing for management skills development (32.8% agreed and 37% completely agreed). However, many participants suppose that computer tests and online tasks cannot conduce developing the group of professional skills within soft skills (22.9% were not sure, 20.3% disagreed and 14.6% completely disagreed), therefore, we conclude that the computer tests can be used just to monitor students’ progress of the level of foreign language communicative competence and we suppose that online tasks, such as web-quests or tasks for finding and analysing information, are not popular enough in Russian foreign language training, as a result, the students are not acquainted with these types of educational technologies and cannot express their opinion on this issue. Furthermore, as it was mentioned before, the technical disciplines can help develop such soft skills.
Consequently, we designed the technology of soft skills development in engineering foreign language education using the productive method, which includes three stages of applying the case study, problem-based learning, and essay writing, and which is shown in
Table 3. For the evaluation of completing these tasks and mastering all groups of soft skills by the students, we developed the assessment criteria that are presented in
Table 4. All this was used in the experimental training of the experimental group of the 2nd year engineering students, who studied the Professionally oriented English language course. After implementing the technology, we got the average score of the students’ soft skills development, which is shown in
Table 5.
Having analysed the findings, we can conclude that after completing the case study, the students on average got a satisfactory rating (39 out of 63) for their soft skills development, which means that they were not quite ready to use their communication, management, and professional skills. After applying problem-based learning, the results improved with a good rating (51 out of 63), showing the ability of students to implement and develop their soft skills. The findings of the essay writing revealed their excellent rating (46 out of 51) of soft skills development, proving that they started to apply and advance their soft skills effectively.
Furthermore, we applied the questionnaire made by the Laboratory of soft skills competencies of Southern Federal University to examine the level of soft skills development among the students of both the experimental and control groups. The results are presented in
Figure 2. As can be seen from the diagrams, at the initial stage of the experiment levels of soft skills development were almost the same in both experimental and control groups, where the largest group of students (65% and 68%, respectively) had a low level of soft skill development, and a third of students (35% and 30%, respectively) had a middle level, while scarcely anyone (0% and 3%, respectively) had a high level. Furthermore, we conducted T-statistic for independent samples and discovered that there were no statistically significant differences between the two groups of students in terms of their level of soft skills development as the overall
p-value was more than the critical
p-value (
p = 0.689, α = 0.05).
After using the productive method for soft skills development in the experimental group, we asked the students of both groups to take part in the same survey again to trace dynamics in soft skills levels. According to the results presented in the diagram, the final stage of the experiment shows that the low level was demonstrated by only 8% of the students from the experimental group, while in the control group, the findings did not completely change in comparison with the initial stage of the experiment (44%). The majority of the participants in both groups had the middle level of soft skills, but the difference in the dynamics was big enough (74% of the students in the experimental group and 53% in the control group). The high level was possessed by 18% of the respondents from the experimental group showing the positive dynamics, and it was almost the same in the control group at the initial and final stages (3%).
To contend with the data received, we used the T-statistic for independent samples and discovered that there were statistically significant differences between two groups of students in terms of their level of soft skills development at the final stage of the research as the overall p-value was less than the critical p-value (p = 0.001, α = 0.05). Thus, the statistics proved the effectiveness of the productive method for advancing soft skills.
Having conducted the experiment, we found that soft skills can be mastered using the productive method of foreign language teaching, where the case study, problem-based learning and essay writing proved to be useful. Consequently, utilising the proposed technology by the foreign language teachers can lead to (1) mastering soft skills and foreign language communicative competence at once; (2) cut in differences between the employers’ requirements and skills the future engineers possess; (3) more focusing of the university education on soft skills development.
5. Conclusions
Soft skills development is urgently relevant in today’s society. Based on the literature review, we see that not only researchers notice it, but also educational standards have begun to focus on soft skills development, proposing official requirements for Bachelor’s degree programs that contain competencies covering soft skills, as well as descriptors for their monitoring, leading to a possible decrease in the discrepancy between the requirements of the employers and the skills that future engineers will possess developing them at the university. Moreover, engineering students show their awareness and interest in soft skills development, which was proven through the questionnaire designed by the authors and used in the survey of 192 engineering students of Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University, Russia. The results of the survey justify that engineering foreign language education has effective means for students’ soft skills development. The designed survey can be useful for the teachers and educational managers to investigate students’ opinions on the issue.
Soft skills can be advanced through the productive method of foreign language teaching, that is teachers can apply productive activities using the EMI concept to facilitate communication, management, and professional skills development. The study shows that for this purpose the case study, problem-based learning and essay writing can be used. Using the productive method, the authors designed the technology of soft skills development in engineering foreign language education. This technology includes usage of the case study, problem-based learning, and essay writing tasks, as well as the stages of their implementation. In addition, the authors developed the assessment criteria for the three groups of soft skills being mastered with the productive method of foreign language teaching, which is useful for foreign language teachers.
Having applied this technology in the experimental training of second-year engineering students, we discovered that in the experimental group, the low level of soft skills on the initial stage decreased up to 57% on the final stage, the middle level raised up to 39% and the high level improved up to 18%, showing the efficiency of the technology used. Comparing the results of the experimental and control groups, it can be mentioned that on the initial stage, their levels were almost the same, while after using productive activities to master the soft skills of engineering students of the experimental group, we see that the difference at the final stage is significant.
Moreover, to critically analyse the findings obtained, the authors carried out the data analysis using the T-statistics that showed the statistically significant difference in the level of students’ soft skills development between the participants of the experimental and control groups according to the results obtained during the initial and final stages of the experiment. Consequently, utilising the productive method of foreign language teaching leads to an increase of not only the command of foreign language communicative competence, but also the level of soft skills development, thus it can be used for soft skills development in engineering foreign language education.