Atlanta, Georgia
June 23, 2013
June 23, 2013
June 26, 2013
2153-5965
Student
13
23.625.1 - 23.625.13
10.18260/1-2--19639
https://peer.asee.org/19639
547
Michael Jones is a program coordinator of Communication, Culture and Information Technology at Sheridan College, and a PhD Candidate at the Faculty of Information at the University of Toronto.
Michael's research interests include applied project-based learning, organizational learning and knowledge management, and the sociological study of applied science and engineering.
From Serious Leisure to Knowing Organizations: Organizational and Knowledge Management Challenges in Student Engineering Project Teams Michael L.W. Jones PhD Candidate, Faculty of Information University of Toronto mlw.jones@mail.utoronto.ca Critiques of contemporary engineering education have highlighted issues of limited applied and “soft” skills development (Fairweather, 2008), arguably leading to retention issues in STEM education (Seymour & Hewitt, 1997) and a mismatch with industry demands for graduates (ABET, 2011). Facing similar challenges, medical and nursing schools have leveraged problem-‐based learning (PBL) strategies where students engage medical cases collaboratively and independently, with faculty serving as facilitators of a student-‐led learning process (Savery, 2006). Engineering educators have adapted similar PBL approaches such as capstone design projects and engineering student design teams to complement the more traditional, basic-‐science based engineering curriculum. Such learning opportunities are qualitatively different than traditional PBL efforts in one demonstrable way. Engineering project teams tend to engage more complex design challenges over a longer period of time compared to the more singularly focused, ad-‐hoc PBL groups used in class-‐based investigations. This qualitative difference creates two organizational challenges unique to engineering project-‐based learning teams. Student engineering design teams must sustain team motivation throughout a long and often arduous process of design and development. Team leaders in particular adopt responsibilities and commitments often equal to or more than a traditional full-‐time job. Much of this effort is not explicitly rewarded – indeed, it often cuts into time and effort normally spent on other curricular and social activities. For many participants, project teams are serious leisure opportunities (Stebbins, 2007), shaped by intense intrinsic motivation, considerable personal sacrifice, strong self-‐identification with the task at hand, and considerable investment of energy and resources. The extended time period and complexity of investigation in engineering student design teams also requires that engineering teams develop into effective and sustained knowledge-‐based organizations. In doing so, student members and leaders engage organizational knowledge management challenges rarely formally taught in the traditional engineering curriculum, including effective sense-‐making, knowledge creation and dissemination processes, and effective and timely decision making (Choo, 2006). This paper describes a larger effort to build a model of these organizational and knowledge management challenges. This effort leverages cultural-‐historical activity theory (CHAT), a complex, dialectical analytical model of situated collaborative action that highlights the contradictions student members and leaders face in engaging a team’s end objectives and goals. While these contradictions and challenges are arguably applicable to all engineering student project teams, specific attention will be paid to Formula SAE (FSAE), a design competition series with a long history and worldwide reach, now including nearly 500 collegiate teams in over 20 countries worldwide. Preliminary research from the author’s participatory observation with one team is discussed in this paper, and is presented as a foundation for a sustained discussion of challenges faced within the larger FSAE community. References ABET. (2011). ABET -‐ Criteria for Accrediting Applied Science Programs, 2012 -‐ 2013. abet.org. Retrieved December 2011, from http://abet.org/asac-‐criteria-‐ 2012-‐2013/ Choo, C. W. (2006). The Knowing Organization: How Organizations Use Information to Construct Meaning, Create Knowledge and Make Decisions. New York: Oxford University Press. Fairweather, J. (2008). Linking Evidence and Promising Practices in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Undergraduate Education (pp. 1–31). National Academies of Science. Savery, J. R. (2006). Overview of Problem-‐based Learning: Definitions and Distinctions. Interdisciplinary Journal of Problem-‐Based Learning, 1(1), 9–20. Seymour, E., & Hewitt, N. M. (1997). Talking about leaving: Why undergraduates leave the sciences. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. Stebbins, R. A. (2007). Serious leisure: A perspective for our time. Transaction Pub.
Jones, M. L. (2013, June), From Serious Leisure to Knowing Organizations: Information and Knowledge Management Challenges in Project-Based Learning Student Engineering Teams Paper presented at 2013 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Atlanta, Georgia. 10.18260/1-2--19639
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