Developing Leadership through an Immersive Service-Oriented International Internship
Author(s) -
Aaron Gordon,
Jeffery Plumblee,
Claire Dancz
Publication year - 2018
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--28145
Subject(s) - internship , capstone , service learning , context (archaeology) , accountability , leadership development , class (philosophy) , service (business) , public relations , medical education , engineering , pedagogy , sociology , political science , business , computer science , medicine , marketing , paleontology , algorithm , artificial intelligence , law , biology
Clemson Engineers for Developing Countries (CEDC) is a student-driven service-oriented program whose mission is to provide sustainable, engineered solutions to communities in the developing world. One of the most successful features of CEDC, from both undergraduate education and community development perspectives, is the structured and innovative internship experience. In addition to in-class student participation in design, planning, and project implementation, a few students are selected annually for an internship in the host community where they have the opportunity to develop and enhance their leadership skills in an international and diverse setting. The internship program consists of Clemson University engineering students living in rural Haiti for 6-12 months, where they lead infrastructure projects around their host community with a team of local Haitian foremen, skilled workers, and general laborers. While many other programs and student organizations provide leadership experience in a classroom context through capstone projects and extra-curricular activities, CEDC interns are tasked with working with local citizens towards a common goal and tangible results. Interns are supported by CEDC’s unique organizational structure that allows students in the classroom to lead design projects that are implemented by the interns in Haiti, with supervision from industry advisors in the United States. CEDC’s project-oriented framework provides students real-world responsibility and accountability for small construction projects that are implemented in Haiti. This real world responsibility enables the development of leadership skills by allowing students to fully immerse themselves in a project’s success or failure in a scaffolded setting. This paper discusses the perspectives and skill sets gained from the internship for both interns and students on campus, including significant leadership development and the ability to engage with people and work within a community across cultures and backgrounds to execute a project. Supporting data, collected by surveying former CEDC interns to better understand their experiences and leadership development in the program, will be presented. The authors build on lessons learned to provide suggestions of how the program could be replicated to provide similar leadership experiences at other academic institutions or within other student organizations. Introduction & Background Engineering problems today require a vastly different standard for engineering education and practice (Duderstadt, 2008). The flurry of technological advances in the 21st Century, coupled with burgeoning globalization, has pressured the engineering profession to establish a new set of guiding principles when it comes educating the next generation of engineers (Amadei, 2009). One of these guiding tenets is leadership; engineers must possess professional skills that complement the hard technical skills inherent in the engineering curriculum (Kumar, 2007). With the baby boomer generation reaching retirement age, more engineers than ever are needed to fill the void and take leadership positions in order for the United States to remain competitive in the global technological and commercial marketplace (Dunn, 2009). Despite the growing number of leadership development programs across the country, there is still a major gap between the educational institution and the needs of the engineering profession (Graham, 2009).
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