Stephanie Swartz

2 articles
University of Applied Sciences Mainz ORCID: 0000-0003-0758-6393

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Who Reads Swartz

Stephanie Swartz's work travels primarily in Technical Communication (96% of indexed citations) · 28 total indexed citations from 2 clusters.

By cluster

  • Technical Communication — 27
  • Digital & Multimodal — 1

Counts include only citations from indexed journals that deposit reference lists with CrossRef. Authors whose readers publish primarily in venues without reference deposits will appear less central than they are. See coverage notes →

  1. Competencies Needed by Business Professionals in the AI Age: Character and Communication Lead the Way
    Abstract

    Many experts project generative AI will impact the types of competencies that are valued among working professionals. This is the first known academic study to explore the views of business practitioners about the impacts of generative AI on skill sets. This survey of 692 business practitioners showed that business practitioners widely use generative AI, with the most common uses involving research and ideation, drafting of business messages and reports, and summarizing and revising text. Business practitioners report that character-based traits such as integrity and soft skills will become more important. Implications for teaching business communication are discussed.

    doi:10.1177/23294906231208166
  2. Building Intercultural Competence Through Virtual Team Collaboration Across Global Classrooms
    Abstract

    By means of a cross-cultural virtual teams project involving classrooms in Scotland, Germany, and Portugal, students were exposed to the challenges of collaborating internationally with the intention of increasing their intercultural competency. Intercultural sensitivity and intercultural communication competency were measured using responses to surveys before and after the 6-week project. Students reported, among other aspects, a heightened awareness of the difficulties of intercultural communication. Despite a general appreciation of the project and its outcomes, negative results, such as an increased dislike of intercultural interaction, emerged. Contradictory results warrant further investigation with data from future collaborations.

    doi:10.1177/2329490619878834