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Improving Generic Skills among Engineering Students through Project-Based Learning in a Project Management Course
Author(s) -
Ana Quevedo,
Dante Guerrero,
Martín Palma,
Susana Vegas
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--19729
Subject(s) - project based learning , curriculum , engineering education , project management , skills management , computer science , dimension (graph theory) , social skills , time management , engineering management , knowledge management , mathematics education , medical education , psychology , engineering , pedagogy , systems engineering , medicine , mathematics , pure mathematics , psychotherapist , operating system
The speed of technological change, the increase in social exigencies, and the need to take good care of the environment, has made evident that engineering graduates must have generic skills of a holistic nature in order to successfully meet future professional challenges. This paper explains the impact of a project-based learning methodology on the improvement of generic skills. The methodology was used in an undergraduate industrial engineering project management course. Measurements of student knowledge and mastery of technical, contextual and behavioral skills were performed at the beginning and end of the course. Written questionnaires that measured the three dimensions were employed; the collected data was used in a statistical and a consistency analysis. The results indicate a significant improvement in student skills that can be attributed to the use of project based learning (PBL). It is known that PBL is only one of the many possible ways to improve generic skills, but it is a powerful tool that balances and complements an engineering curriculum that strives to develop the generic skills of engineering students.

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