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Work in Progress: Vertical Integration of Engineering Design in an Undergraduate BME Curriculum
Author(s) -
Steven Higbee,
Sharon Miller
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
2019 asee annual conference & exposition proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--33663
Subject(s) - capstone , curriculum , engineering education , inclusion (mineral) , work (physics) , engineering design process , engineering management , engineering , engineering ethics , computer science , mechanical engineering , pedagogy , psychology , social psychology , algorithm
Relevant and robust biomedical engineering programs integrate challenging, hands-on engineering design projects that require student teams to develop and deliver functional prototypes in response to biomedical design problems. The inclusion of such projects throughout Biomedical Engineering (BME) curricula not only brings active learning to the classroom but helps students improve as team members, decision makers, and problem solvers. This work highlights how sophomore and junior level engineering design projects can increase students’ fundamental engineering design knowledge and self-reported confidence in approaching design projects. By steadily increasing the complexity of engineering design experiences throughout the BME undergraduate curriculum, our continued work studies whether intentional, vertical alignment of engineering experiences ultimately better prepares BME undergraduates for their senior design capstone projects and their professional pursuits.

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