A Lab For All Seasons, A Lab For All Reasons
Author(s) -
David F. Ollis
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
papers on engineering education repository (american society for engineering education)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--8525
Subject(s) - operability , session (web analytics) , computer science , set (abstract data type) , flexibility (engineering) , electronics , state (computer science) , electrical engineering , engineering , software engineering , world wide web , management , algorithm , economics , programming language
A “device dissection” laboratory, based initially on light driven devices, was conceived and realized in the early 1990s as a means of introducing new engineering students to the field of engineering 1 . The varieties of summer and semester engineering uses for this facility were summarized in an earlier paper 2 of related title “A Lab for All Seasons, A Lab for All Reasons.” The present paper, “A Lab for All Reasons, A Lab for All Seasons: Enlarging the Participant Base,” extends utilization of our engineering laboratory to non-engineering faculty and to non-engineering students. The first of these newer forays involves utilization of the lab as an enrichment adjunct to courses taught in other non-engineering departments, here with examples from Foreign Languages and Literatures, and Industrial Design. The second involves a new Technology Literacy course created for non-engineering students, and taught with the assistance of an English department faculty member (also serving in the College of Engineering’s Writing Assistance program). Collectively, these three instructional efforts illustrate collaborations with faculty and students in non-engineering disciplines, and are thus examples of multidisciplinary forays in technology education, in which one discipline is always engineering. Further, our Technology Literacy course and the Spanish foreign language course both satisfy Science, Technology, and Society (STS) distribution requirements for non-technical and technical students, respectively. As such, these course are examples of liberal education for students in complementary majors.
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