Corporate Training in Brazilian Software Engineering: A Qualitative Study of Useful Learning Experiences
Rodrigo Siqueira, Antonio Oliveira, Breno Alves de Andrade, Lidiane C S Gomes, Danilo Monteiro Ribeiro

TL;DR
This qualitative study explores Brazilian software engineers' perceptions of useful learning experiences, emphasizing continuous technical updating, practical application, and the importance of integrating multiple learning modalities for effective training.
Contribution
It identifies key themes of useful learning experiences in software engineering and highlights the need for integrated training ecosystems combining technical, academic, social, and soft skills.
Findings
Technical updating and practical application are most valued by professionals.
Formal education and social learning are seen as complementary.
Effective training should integrate multiple learning dimensions.
Abstract
Context: Quantitative studies can identify statistical predictors of training quality, but they often fail to capture what professionals themselves consider genuinely useful learning experiences and why. Objective: This study qualitatively investigates which types of learning experiences are perceived as most useful by Brazilian software engineering professionals and what characteristics define this usefulness. Method: Open-ended responses from 195 software engineering professionals were analyzed using Thematic Analysis, supported by frequency and lemmatization analysis using IRAMUTEQ and co-occurrence analysis between themes. Results: Five themes emerged: Continuous Technical Updating (T1), Practical and Applied Learning (T2), Formal Academic Education (T3), Social Learning and Networking (T4), and Leadership Development and Soft Skills (T5). Technical updating and practical…
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