Integrating Global Systems Development Skills into the Engineering Curricu-lum (original) (raw)

Evaluating the applicability of Approaches to Teaching Inventory (ATI) in higher engineering education research and development

2020

This Work-in-Progress research paper presents the rationale and a plan to evaluate the applicability, validity, and reliability of Approaches to Teaching Inventory (ATI) in higher engineering education research and development. The ATI is a widely used, but also criticized, tool in higher education research in different disciplines, including engineering. This paper discusses the validity and reliability of the ATI as an instrument in general, and the applicability of the ATI in the discipline of engineering. A research plan to scrutinize the validity, reliability, and applicability of the ATI in engineering education is proposed, and the FIE community is invited to offer their expertise in developing and executing the plan.

Ac 2011-1072: Defining Global Competence for Engineer- Ing Students

2011

In this study, we collected the opinions of prominent members of engineering industry and academia in order to determine a clear definition of what it means for engineering graduates to be globally competent. The data collection was conducted via an online survey, which was adapted from a survey outlined in Parkinson et al.'s 2009 paper entitled "Developing Global Competence in Engineers: What Does It Mean? What Is Most Important?". The similarity between our surveys allowed us to compare our results to the results they presented. We also collected more demographic data, which allowed us to look for relationships between the participants’ answers and the way they ranked the thirteen dimensions. We found that only some of the demographic information correlated with some of the competencies, but not all. Our survey indicated that the top five most important dimensions of global competence are: 1) the ability to communicate across cultures, 2) the ability to appreciate ot...

A Procedure for Analysing ESD Curricula Applied on Engineering Programmes at Swedish Universities

2013

There are several different methods for implementing curricular elements, but fairly few procedures for determining the success of the implementation. The central question is whether the student has mastered the desired set of skills and the expertise that fulfil the ambitions of the original policy documents. This paper presents a procedure for analyzing how ambitions related to education for sustainable development (ESD) are implemented in educational programmes, i.e. how political ambitions are cascaded down to the level that the student meets in the courses. The method was applied to the programmes in chemical engineering, mechanical engineering and engineering physics at two Swedish universities. The methodological framework is based on analyses of how ambitions on ESD are handled in texts in relevant documents at different levels and the relation between these. The selected texts were: the national degree ordinance, university policy documents, programme curricula, intended course learning outcomes, and learning assessment texts. While the study is focused on the inclusion of sustainable development competences in engineering education, the presented procedure should be general enough for application to any studied aspect of skills in a programme, in particular when this skill is developed in several different courses. The described procedure can also be used to monitor changes over time.

A Direct Method for Teaching and Measuring Engineering Professional Skills for Global Workplace Competency: Adaptations to Computing at a University in the United Arab Emirates

The Engineering Professional Skills Assessment (EPSA) is the first and only direct method and measurement tool in the literature that can be used to teach and simultaneously measure the ABET non-technical skills for use at both course and program levels. The American Society for Engineering Education award-winning EPSA is a discussion-based performance activity designed to elicit students' knowledge and application of engineering professional skills. A partnership with Zayed University in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) was formed in 2014 to adapt the EPSA to the field of computing, as well as to the UAE context. The final deliverable of the project will be the Computing Professional Skills Assessment, which will be made freely available to the computing and IT communities worldwide. This paper describes the initial stages of the project, the development of one scenario and two dimensions of the CPS Rubric.

Developing Direct Measures of Global Competence

2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition Proceedings

is currently a postdoctoral associate for education research at MIT's Teaching and Learning Laboratory. She completed her doctoral work at Vanderbilt University in international education policy studies, focusing on engineering student access, equity, and success, and she completed her bachelor's degrees in mechanical engineering and foreign languages and literatures at MIT. Her research interests include the use of technology in education in low-income contexts and the structure of engineering training for local capacity building, currently focusing on online learning.

Rubric for Global Competency in Engineering Education

2013

Educating engineering students for global competence is increasingly required to keep up with the contemporary global environment. As more engineering programs are incorporating global competency into their curriculum, more attention needs to be paid to how you assess that competency. Implementation and assessment of international experiences for engineers has been studied in the last ten years. Largely absent, however, are studies featuring rigorous methods for assessing competencies specifically related to professional practice within the academic discipline. Discipline specific measures for assessing international engagement in engineering need wider implementation. Only one of the ABET EC2000 Criteria 3 student outcomes mentions the word 'global" explicitly, criteria h. However, the three others that are compatible with assessing global competency are c, j and k. Of these four criteria, two of these are hard, technical skills, and two are competencies related to profess...