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Curricula To Educate The 2020 Mse Engineering Professional: Simple But Powerful Changes In The Way That Mse Is Taught
Author(s) -
Linda Vanasupa,
Blair London,
Katherine Chen,
Richard Savage
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
2006 annual conference and exposition proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--1459
Subject(s) - curriculum , engineering ethics , sustainability , engineering , management , engineering management , computer science , sociology , pedagogy , ecology , economics , biology
National leaders in science and technology sectors speak in unison as they call for engineers who are not only technically competent in their fields, but who possess the abilities to communicate well, to work on teams, to apply systems thinking, to operate in the global business environment, to design within a greater set of constraints (environmental, health and safety, sustainability, economic, societal, political, manufacturability, and ethical).  In short, our challenge is to educate an engineering professional who is far more sophisticated than the engineer of the 20 th century.  Additionally, challenges brought on by the overuse of natural resources put a special responsibility on materials science and engineering (MSE) faculty, whose role it is to assist in shaping the MSE profession.  How can faculty deliver relevant curricula for the MSE engineering professional in an already crowded curriculum? Certainly curricular content must be uptodate.  However, a number of the goals can be met through changing the way in which the curriculum is delivered.  In particular, we have emphasized mastery at the lower levels to increase retention, and implemented a number of learning “best practices”.  Our preliminary results are promising: within one year, we were able to reverse a fiveyear trend in declining enrollment; we have just finished our fourth consecutive year of 100% ontime completions of senior projects; students exhibit a shift in mindset towards a greater awareness of their professional responsibility to serve humanity.  In this paper, we will provide a survey of the techniques that we have used along with some preliminary results from our program.

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