Title :
Effects on students of a freshman engineering design course
Author :
Courter, S.S. ; Millar, Susan B. ; Lyons, Lyman
Author_Institution :
Learning through Evaluation, Adaptation & Dissemination Center, Wisconsin Univ., Madison, WI, USA
Abstract :
University of Wisconsin-Madison engineering professors piloted a freshman introduction to engineering course with 67 students in fall 1994. Several departments now require the course, and the fall 1995 enrolment was increased to 224 students. The three credit course concentrates on having students work in teams to identify customer needs, find solutions, and design a final product. Students in lab sections of twelve to eighteen first work in small groups of three or four to create proposed solutions, then meet as a lab section to decide on a solution and design and test it. Students conclude the course with formal presentations to students, faculty, and customers. Qualitative evaluation information based on observations and interviews with students and faculty, plus open ended surveys completed by students, indicates that the students experienced engineering in a personal, supportive team oriented environment. The course helped students make informed career decisions, understand the context for courses within an engineering curriculum, and develop a sense of professional identity as engineers. Retention data indicates that students who took the course are staying in engineering into the second semester of their sophomore year at a higher rate than other students
Keywords :
design engineering; educational courses; engineering education; human factors; professional aspects; teaching; customer needs; engineering curriculum; engineering professors; enrolment; final product; formal presentations; freshman engineering design course; freshman introduction to engineering course; informed career decisions; lab section; open ended surveys; professional identity; qualitative evaluation information; supportive team oriented environment; three credit course; Buildings; Data engineering; Design engineering; Educational institutions; Engineering education; Engineering profession; Knowledge engineering; Process design; Product design; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Frontiers in Education Conference, 1996. FIE '96. 26th Annual Conference., Proceedings of
Conference_Location :
Salt Lake City, UT
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3348-9
DOI :
10.1109/FIE.1996.573103