Design Team Skills Curriculum For Intermediate Level Project Class
Author(s) -
Steven Zemke,
Diane Zemke
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
2007 annual conference and exposition proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--1898
Subject(s) - formative assessment , capstone , curriculum , teamwork , class (philosophy) , summative assessment , project based learning , computer science , coaching , modular design , medical education , mathematics education , psychology , pedagogy , medicine , artificial intelligence , psychotherapist , operating system , algorithm , political science , law
Many engineering programs include a pre-capstone design class to prepare students for their senior design project. These classes typically teach the design process and teamwork skills in the context of shorter projects. To learn this type of engineering collaboration students need team practice time of discrete skills in a semi-controlled environment. Further, faculty monitoring and well-planned intervention into teams as they practice can greatly increase learning. However, scheduling team practice time into the regular class period seriously reduces the time to introduce the content and method of these skills. Instructors are often torn between providing adequate instruction and adequate practice time. As a result, successful learning of these skills is hampered. This paper describes an assessment-driven curricular development at Gonzaga University to teach collaborative engineering skills. The modular curriculum consists of three components: 1. An intelligent tutoring system prepares students with content knowledge before class practice. Formative and summative assessments are part of this system. 2. Structured team practice sessions centered on challenging case studies. Recorded and transcribed team interactions will be used to improve and verify that the case studies initiate higher-level group application of the skills. 3. A “coaching tool kit” equips the instructor with topic-specific intervention strategies to help teams master the skills. Recorded and transcribed student interactions before, during, and after interventions will be used to improve and validate the intervention strategies. This project is in the early stage of a multi-year endeavor that is soliciting collaborators. Collaborators can join the project by using and assessing modules, creating new modules, or both. Our ultimate goal is to create an open community of practice that creates, improves, and uses this curriculum. Once mature, the curriculum will include a full array of modules that teach the skills that support engineering collaboration.
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