Title
Panel: Engineering and development: Facilitating successful project work in diverse global contexts
Abstract
Over the last decade, a growing number of initiatives have emerged to provide engineering students, faculty, and professionals with opportunities to work on service-oriented projects in developing contexts. And while these courses and programs provide needed resources and services to communities in far-flung locations, they also pose unique challenges and difficulties. For example, projects of this type often require knowledge, skills, and attitudes that are not typically covered in traditional engineering courses nor possessed by many faculty. Additionally, there is growing recognition regarding the need to predict and evaluate the full range of impacts that student projects have on partner communities - both positive and negative. This panel engages these kinds of challenges by bringing together a group of individuals with extensive experience preparing engineering students for project work in developing contexts. In addition to representing programs at four institutions (Colorado School of Mines, Michigan Technological University, Purdue University, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute), the presenters are involved with a host of related national and international initiatives. Each panelist will give an overview of their efforts, with particular emphasis on observed successes and failures, conceptual hurdles faced by students and professionals, pedagogical approaches employed, and most useful resources. The primary audience for this panel includes faculty, staff, and students who lead, support, and/or study global service learning. To enable a more engaging, interactive, and productive session, ample time will be provided to allow attendees to describe their own experiences, share resources, and pose questions. The primary intent of the panel is to help university students, faculty, and staff be more effective when undertaking engineering work in developing contexts. including by promoting scholarly community and collaboration, sharing resources, and seeding new - esearch initiatives.
Year
DOI
Venue
2012
10.1109/FIE.2012.6462379
FIE
Keywords
Field
DocType
educational courses,engineering education,resource allocation,service-oriented architecture,student experiments,panel,ample time,conceptual hurdles,diverse global contexts,engineering and development,engineering courses,engineering students,far-flung locations,global service learning,interactive session,partner communities,pedagogical approaches,pose questions,pose unique challenges,productive session,program representation,project work,resource sharing,service-oriented projects,pbl,community development,global engineering,project-based learning,service learning,service oriented architecture
Sociology,Engineering management,Knowledge management,Engineering education,Community development,Resource allocation,Project-based learning,Shared resource,Service-learning,Service-oriented architecture
Conference
ISSN
ISBN
Citations 
0190-5848 E-ISBN : 978-1-4673-1351-3
978-1-4673-1351-3
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
0
8
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jesiek, B.K.1114.44
julia thompson201.35
anne dare300.34
James L. Huff454.71
William C. Oakes566.83
Juan C. Lucena6113.18
kurt paterson711.16
Richard F. Vaz8182.04