scholarly journals Using Technical Entrepreneurship And Service Learning To Promote An International Perspective In An Undergraduate Engineering Program

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Jordan ◽  
Glenn Blalock ◽  
Walter Bradley ◽  
Cynthia Fry ◽  
Anne Grinols ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Eufemia Faller ◽  
Edicio Faller

The 21st century education challenges educators to expose students to a wide variety of circumstances and problem situations where they are required to apply the skills they have learned. In engineering education, these are mostly limited to simulated scenarios which are devoid of real and actual interactions with the problems in the community. This article aims to describe how problem-based learning pedagogy and authentic assessment are used in the Computer Engineering program of Ateneo de Davao University as an implementation of the outcomes-based education. This is a descriptive & qualitative research that utilizes focus group discussions as a methodology for achieving its objective. This study uses the frame of experiential learning that is problem-driven, community-based, multi-disciplinary, integrative & collaborative. The computer engineering program uses a multi-disciplinary and integrative approach to problem-based learning through the service-learning program of the institution. This provides the students with an opportunity to interact with a community, identify its problems, analyze and create a concrete solution applying their acquired skills. Since the students are engaged with the community's actual and real problems, they will be assessed using authentic assessment mechanisms. Experiential learning, problem-based pedagogy with authentic assessment open doors of opportunities for a more meaningful and relevant computer engineering program.


1995 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Levin ◽  
John H. Wyckoff

This study identifies student variables that predict persistence and success in an undergraduate engineering program. Three logistic models were developed that predicted the probability of persisting successfully. Significant predictors included both cognitive and noncognitive variables; students who did well in science and mathematics courses and who were genuinely interested in engineering were more likely to persist and succeed. Predictor variables were not constant over time but changed as students progressed through the first two years of study, with performance in prerequisite science and mathematics courses emerging as the best predictors. The authors briefly discuss academic advising implications.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Duffy ◽  
Carol Barry ◽  
Linda Barrington ◽  
David Kazmer ◽  
William Moeller ◽  
...  

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