期刊名称:Proceedings of the Canadian Engineering Education Association
出版年度:2015
语种:English
出版社:The Canadian Engineering Education Association (CEEA)
摘要:Recent educational research in engineering has examined the challenges Canadian universities are facing when implementing graduate attributes, especially those attributes that involve significant social components (such as ethics and equity, impact of technology on society, and communication skills). In response to these challenges, this paper asks: how might experiential education be used as an approach to teach non-technical graduate attributes? Having asked this question at our own institution, we are in the process of implementing experienced-based approaches to engineering education. We describe our efforts in curricular and non-curricular spaces which include adding project-based components to our existing courses on technology and society and communication, designing a new experiential course on creativity and innovation, serving as clients for capstone courses, facilitating reflection for our co-op program, developing a workshop on community engagement, and organizing design competitions in our innovation centre. We analyze the challenges and the benefits of these approaches. Our argument is that experience alone may not lead to planned learning outcomes, so finding creative ways to promote reflection on experience becomes critical. In our programs, this has meant: playing the role of both client and facilitator in projects; partnering with faculty members in other disciplines; and having students directly interact with users from very different backgrounds. Through these approaches, we are finding ways to help students visualize the lived context of technology use in communities, and ways to help them understand the non-technical components of design and co-op work that are essential if we want to create just and sustainable outcomes though technology. The implication of this preliminary reflexive account is that experiential education holds much promise for improving instruction related to non-technical graduate attributes.