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Using Multi Disciplinary Teams To Teach Communication To Engineers, Or "Practicing What We Preach"
Author(s) -
John C. Anderson,
David Kelso,
Charles Yarnoff,
Barbara Shwom,
Penny Hirsch
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--8815
Subject(s) - discipline , teamwork , curriculum , session (web analytics) , communication skills , engineering education , cross disciplinary , computer science , professional communication , engineering ethics , engineering management , mathematics education , engineering , psychology , pedagogy , medical education , sociology , management , world wide web , medicine , social science , data science , economics
Many new engineering courses tell students how important it is to write clear reports and proposals, deliver polished oral presentations, communicate effectively with clients, and work well on multi-disciplinary teams. This paper suggests one model for accomplishing these objectives: a design and communication course for engineering freshmen based on a crossdisciplinary approach and taught by multi-disciplinary teams. This paper will summarize the intellectual and practical similarities between design and communication that form the basis of our collaboration, explain how our cross-school course is administered and taught, discuss how we are evaluating student progress, and outline the benefits of teaching design and communication in this multi-disciplinary way. We argue that this team model strengthens the theoretical underpinnings of our course while improving learning outcomes in both communication and design.

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