Curriculum design and higher order skills: challenging assumptions
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Curriculum design and higher order skills: challenging assumptions |
---|---|
Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | Crosthwaite, Caroline (Author), Jolly, Lesley (Author), Brodie, Lyn (Author), Kavanagh, Lydia (Author), Buys, Laurie (Author) and Turner, Jennifer (Author) |
Journal or Proceedings Title | Proceedings of the 5th International Conference: Innovation, Practice and Research in Engineering Education (EE 2012) |
Number of Pages | 10 |
Year | 2012 |
Place of Publication | Loughborough, United Kingdom |
ISBN | 9781907632167 |
Web Address (URL) of Paper | http://cede.lboro.ac.uk/ee2012/papers/ee2012_submission_168_gp.pdf |
Conference/Event | 5th International Conference: Innovation, Practice and Research in Engineering Education (EE 2012) |
Event Details | 5th International Conference: Innovation, Practice and Research in Engineering Education (EE 2012) Event Date 18 to end of 20 Sep 2012 Event Location Coventry, United Kingdom |
Abstract | This paper is based on an Australian Learning & Teaching Council (ALTC) funded evaluation in 13 universities across Australia and New Zealand of the use of Engineers Without Borders (EWB) projects in first-year engineering courses. All of the partner institutions have implemented this innovation differently and comparison of these implementations affords us the opportunity to assemble 'a body of carefully gathered data that provides evidence of which approaches work for which students in which learning environments'. This study used a mixed-methods data collection approach and a realist analysis. Data was collected by program logic analysis with course co-ordinators, observation of classes, focus groups with students, exit survey of students and interviews with staff as well as scrutiny of relevant course and curriculum documents. Course designers and co-ordinators gave us a range of reasons for using the projects, most of which alluded to their presumed capacity to deliver experience in and learning of higher order thinking skills in areas such as sustainability, ethics, teamwork and communication. For some students, however, the nature of the projects decreased their interest in issues such as ethical development, sustainability and how to work in teams. We also found that the projects provoked different responses from students depending on the nature of the courses in which they were embedded (general introduction, design, communication, or problem-solving courses) and their mode of delivery (lecture, workshop or online). |
Keywords | Australia; curriculum designs; data collection; first-year engineering; focus groups; learning environments; New Zealand; partner institutions; program logic; thinking skills; higher education research |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 380204. Panel data analysis |
390113. Science, technology and engineering curriculum and pedagogy | |
390409. Learning sciences | |
Public Notes | You are free to copy, distribute, and display the work. You must give the original author credit and you may not use this work for commercial purposes or alter, transform, or build upon this work. |
Byline Affiliations | University of Queensland |
Engineering Education Research Group | |
Queensland University of Technology | |
Engineers Without Borders, Australia | |
Institution of Origin | University of Southern Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q1vq3/curriculum-design-and-higher-order-skills-challenging-assumptions
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