Title :
Enhancing the engineering curriculum through project-based learning
Author :
Hadim, Hamid A. ; Esche, Sven K.
Author_Institution :
Charles V. Schaefer Jr. Sch. of Eng., Stevens Inst. of Technol., Hoboken, NJ, USA
Abstract :
Project-based learning (PBL) is an instructional approach that is gaining increasing interest within the engineering education community. The benefits of PBL include enhanced student participation in the learning process (active learning and self-learning), enhanced communication skills, addressing of a wider set of learning styles, and promotion of critical and proactive thinking. PBL also facilitates the development of many of the "soft skills" demanded from engineering graduates, as embodied in the ABET EC 2000. Examples include effective teaming skills, project management, communications, ethics, engineering economics, etc. At Stevens Institute of Technology the undergraduate engineering curriculum has undergone significant revisions to reflect the latest trend towards enhancement of traditional lecture-based courses with both a design spine and a laboratory experience propagating through the entire educational program. Project-based learning is also being integrated throughout the curriculum. An initial implementation of PBL and its preliminary assessment in a freshman-level course on Mechanics of Solids and a junior-level course on Mechanisms and Machine Dynamics is presented.
Keywords :
educational courses; engineering education; ABET EC 2000; Mechanics of Solids; Mechanisms and Machine Dynamics; Stevens Institute of Technology; active learning; communications; critical thinking; design spine; engineering economics; engineering education; engineering graduates; enhanced communication skills; ethics; freshman-level course; junior-level course; learning methods; learning styles; lecture-based courses; proactive thinking; project management; project-based learning; self-learning; student participation; teaching techniques; teaming skills; undergraduate engineering curriculum enhancement; Design engineering; Educational technology; Engineering education; Ethics; Laboratories; Learning systems; Process design; Project management; Solids; Teamwork;
Conference_Titel :
Frontiers in Education, 2002. FIE 2002. 32nd Annual
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7444-4
DOI :
10.1109/FIE.2002.1158200