Development And Implementation Of Challenge Based Instruction In Statics And Dynamics
Author(s) -
Robert Freeman,
Horacio Vasquez,
Martin W. Knecht,
Taylor Martin,
Arturo Fuentes Cabrera,
Joan L. Walker,
Araceli Ortiz
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--16904
Subject(s) - statics , curriculum , mathematics education , computer science , component (thermodynamics) , comparative statics , dynamics (music) , engineering ethics , engineering management , pedagogy , engineering , sociology , psychology , physics , classical mechanics , macroeconomics , economics , thermodynamics
This paper discusses challenge-based instructional (CBI) materials developed for courses in Statics and Dynamics. This effort is a component of a funded College Cost Reduction and Access Act (CCRAA) grant from the Department of Education, and focuses on student retention and development of adaptive expertise. Studies have shown that minority science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) students leave STEM undergraduate fields in part due to lack of real world connections to their classroom learning experiences. Furthermore, in STEM fields the conventional approach is to teach for efficiency first and for innovation only in the latter years of the curriculum. This focus on efficiency first can actually stifle attempts at innovation in later courses. Our response to these issues is to change the way we teach. CBI, a form of inquiry based learning, can be simply thought of as teaching backwards. In this approach, a challenge is presented first, and the supporting theory (required to solve the challenge) second. Our implementation of CBI is built around the How People Learn (HPL) framework for effective learning environments and is realized and anchored by the STAR Legacy Cycle, as developed and fostered by the VaNTH NSF ERC for Bioengineering Educational Technologies. The developed materials are a result of collaboration between faculty members at the University of Texas-Pan American (UTPA) and South Texas College (STC), a two year Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI).
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