Title
When non-engineering students work on an international service-learning engineering project - A case study.
Abstract
Service-learning has been proven to be a high impact educational pedagogy in many disciplines. It addresses human, and community needs through engaging in community activities. With professional engineering expertise, integrating engineering into service-learning not only can make particularly impactful community service, especially in developing countries where engineering expertise is not always available but also provides an effective way for students to apply their theoretical knowledge to solve real-world problems. Service-learning in engineering has been documented in the last 20 years, and it was implemented as extracurricular activities followed by integrating into core curriculums. However, most of the programs are only offer to the engineering students and less consider implementing as a form of general education with applying multidisciplinary approach. This research examines how to integrate students from very different disciplines into the same project. Our case study is a credit-bearing service-learning subject offered by the Department of Computing which is open to all undergraduate students and the projects were conducted in Rwanda and Cambodia in 2015 and 2016.
Year
Venue
Keywords
2017
IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference Proceedings
Education,Service-Learning,Training
Field
DocType
ISSN
Multidisciplinary approach,Engineering ethics,Sociology,Developing country,Cultural diversity,Curriculum,General education,Service-learning
Conference
2377-6919
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
2
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Kenneth W.K. Lo1193.42
Chi Kin Lau200.68
Stephen Chi-fai Chan326722.15
Grace Ngai488289.27