DocumentCode
3131296
Title
Training engineers in the third world context: The hidden curriculum
Author
van Schalkwyk, J.J.D. ; Weyers, T. ; van Oostrum, L.
Author_Institution
Pretoria Univ., South Africa
fYear
1993
fDate
6-9 Nov 1993
Firstpage
670
Lastpage
675
Abstract
Traditionally, the Engineering Faculty at the University of Pretoria has selected its students from white, male, Afrikaans-speaking students. These now constitute approximately 4% of the population and the indications are that the future ratio will be even smaller. With few exceptions, the Engineering Faculty students still come from this group. It is pointed out that, if more engineers are to be trained, one must exploit the resources of the whole population. To this end, the Engineering Faculty is doing the following: bridging courses for underprepared students are offered in the physical sciences; engineering courses will be offered in English from 1994; and main stream training in electronic engineering will make the hidden curriculum of engineering training explicit and offer tuition in the neglected competencies required for the profession
Keywords
educational courses; engineering education; professional aspects; teaching; training; South Africa; bridging courses; curriculum; education; engineering training; physical sciences; profession; students; third world; tuition; Africa; Continents; Data engineering; Design engineering; Educational institutions; Government; Mathematics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Frontiers in Education Conference, 1993. Twenty-Third Annual Conference. 'Engineering Education: Renewing America's Technology', Proceedings.
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
ISSN
0190-5848
Print_ISBN
0-7803-1482-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FIE.1993.405438
Filename
405438
Link To Document