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Mini Term Abroad Programs In Brasil And Scotland For Engineering, Science, And Liberal Arts Majors
Author(s) -
Philip Snow,
George Williams,
Karen Williams
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--10154
Subject(s) - curriculum , liberal arts education , european union , engineering education , study abroad , george (robot) , hydroelectricity , theme (computing) , engineering , political science , management , engineering ethics , sociology , civil engineering , engineering management , pedagogy , higher education , computer science , law , artificial intelligence , business , electrical engineering , economics , economic policy , operating system
Both the General Education Program and the new Engineering curriculum for undergraduates at Union College require of students either three courses in a foreign culture or an international experience. To provide this experience, we initiated a miniterms abroad program. This paper describes two mini-term courses which are compatible with existing engineering course schedules and emphasize a theme that is part of the new engineering curriculum at Union – multi-disciplinary solutions to complex problems. The first Union mini-term abroad to be established was a three-week visit to Sao Paulo, Brasil, to study the effects of water resources and water pollution on a large urban city. The Brasilian program, which has been offered during the last five years starting in the winter term break of 1997, is coordinated by two Union faculty members a civil engineer and a sociologist. It was developed especially for engineers with an emphasis on hydroelectric power, water and wastewater treatment, river and reservoir watersheds along with social, political, and economic interactions. Based on this offering, another mini-term in urban Scotland has been developed and was offered for the first time in the summer of 2001. Based in Glasgow, it is coordinated by two Union faculty members – a computer scientist and a biologist. Presentation topics in Scotland include bioinformatics, novel pharmaceutical delivery systems, public health data analysis, proteomics, and cloning. The mini-term format achieves several objectives: it is a course that is scheduled over two terms and the intervening break so that it can be taken in parallel with regular course schedules; it uses multi-disciplinary student teams to study how technology can improve quality of life; and it encourages information gathering by critical listening, first -hand observation, and directed library research culminating in both oral and written presentations. Page 764.1 Proceedings of the 2002 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference & Exposition Copyright „2002, American Society for Engineering Education. The Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation has funded the development of mini-term programs at Union College. Funding was also provided by the Keck Foundation. Positive assessment results and prospective student requests have encouraged expanded offerings of the mini-term abroad courses.

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