Teaching Design, Synthesis, And Communication To First Year Engineering Students At The University Of Toronto
Author(s) -
Will Cluett,
Peter Weiß,
Kim Woodhouse,
David M. Bagley,
Susan McCahan
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--13243
Subject(s) - teamwork , curriculum , engineering education , set (abstract data type) , mathematics education , computer science , engineering , engineering management , pedagogy , psychology , management , economics , programming language
One of the central tenets of new engineering curricula is an introductory course that provides students with a framework for engineering practice. This enables them to begin learning aspects of systems engineering and design, along with communications, teamwork and other professional skills, thereby gaining some sense of the excitement of the engineering profession. The Engineering Faculty at the University of Toronto has developed such an introductory course for its first year students that draws resources from across its various disciplines. It uses existing strengths in design, preventive engineering and social impact of technology, human factors, and language across the curriculum. The course development team started by defining the student needs that were unmet by the previous first year program and then constructed a list of goals for the new course in terms of expected student accomplishments. This list was reformulated into a set of learning objectives, which were then clustered to form a cohesive course outline. The new course, entitled Engineering Strategies and Practice (ESP), is a two-course sequence (26 weeks total) that was offered on a pilot basis for 100 students in the 2003-04 academic year.
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