Charlotte, North Carolina
June 20, 1999
June 20, 1999
June 23, 1999
2153-5965
15
4.444.1 - 4.444.15
10.18260/1-2--7917
https://peer.asee.org/7917
453
Session 2532
Redesign Of An Undergraduate Analog Integrated Circuits Course Graciano Dieck, Artemio Aguilar, Sergio Malacón, Manuel E. Macías Electrical Engineering Department ITESM, Monterrey México
ABSTRACT
This paper presents a redesign project of the course “E-95-863-Analog Integrated Circuits” that is taken by junior students of the Electronics and Communications Engineering (IEC) Program at ITESM campus Monterrey. This redesign project includes a pedagogical procedure before its implementation with a pilot group of students. This complete pedagogical procedure consists of the following parts: educative intentions, objectives, general contents that includes a contents block diagram, profile of the IEC program, IEC study plan, curricular map showing the courses serving E-95-863 as well as the the courses served by E-95-863, conceptual contents, procedural contents, attitudinal contents, learning strategies and course activities. Some of the learning techniques used in the course are: Interactive exposition of topics (from 16 to 20 hours per semester), Internal group activities (11 during the semester), homework done by external groups (8 during the semester), monthly projects that include report writing and oral presentations done by external groups (3 during the semester), self-study reading assignments and discussion (14 during the semester), office consulting and virtual consulting. The course has been mounted on the “Learning Space®” educational shell that runs under the Lotus Notes® data base program. The shell provides 4 virtual environments available (through the WWW) to students and instructors: “profile”, “media center”, “course room” and “schedule”. For instructors an additional environment, the “assessment”, is available in order to develop exams, surveys, and quizzes. The implementation phase using this scheme started in the Fall of 1997. In the Spring of 1998, the course was taught with some improvements after receiving some feedback from students, professors and from the pedagogical associate. In the Fall of 1998, two sections of the course are being taught using this redesign strategy. The implementation results after 2 semesters has shown, on the students, a significant positive impact in 8 procedural and 5 attitudinal contents established in the Mission of ITESM toward the year 2005. However, for the pilot groups of 17 (fall 1997) and 21 (spring 1998) students, the instructor has observed a significant increase in the teaching load compared to the traditional scheme. This is due to the detailed personalized formative and summative evaluations for each student and the continuous attendance to the discussion virtual environment such as “the course room”. Further refinements are developed in order to fit the scheme to the typical teaching loads required for the traditional courses at ITESM.
I. INTRODUCTION
In the summer of 1997, the ITESM initiated a project to reengineer the teaching-learning process at the 27 campuses of the system. The project incorporates the fundamental aspects written in the
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Dieck, G., & Aguilar, A., & Malacon, S., & Macias, M. E. (1999, June), Redesign Of An Undergraduate Analog Integrated Circuits Course Paper presented at 1999 Annual Conference, Charlotte, North Carolina. 10.18260/1-2--7917
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