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- 2014 ASEE International Forum
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Arnold Neville Pears, Uppsala University; Mats Daniels, Uppsala University; Åsa Sofia Cajander
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Student Development
and assessment approach used at that time is described in Pears et al. 200117.In 2005 we introduced international collaboration in a semester long project course, where the Uppsala students work with students at an American university. This course has an explicit focus on competencies suitable for global collaboration and different pedagogical challenges with this has been investigated in an action research manner3-9,14,15. The goals are to help to scaffold progressive development of global engineering competencies and experience.The paper is structured as follows. We describe the evolution of the curriculum reflecting on the instructional design
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- Track 3 - Session 2
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- 2014 ASEE International Forum
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Cheryl Matherly, The University of Tulsa; Sarah R. Phillips, Rice University ; Junichiro Kono, Rice University; Shane M Curtis, University of Tulsa
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Student Development
and awareness of various cultures and their impact onsociety, and an ability to use cultural context to evaluate what is known or valued. Intrapersonaldevelopment considers how an individual becomes more aware of and integrates his or her personalvalues into a sense of identity. This dimension is evidenced by a student’s sense of self-direction inlife, awareness of his or her strengths, values, personal characteristics, and sense of self. It is alsoevidenced by respect for and acceptance of cultural perspectives that are different from his or herown and a degree of emotional self-assurance in encounters with other cultures. Interpersonaldevelopment is concerned with how willing an individual is to interact with people from differentsocial and
- Conference Session
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- 2014 ASEE International Forum
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David DiBiasio, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Terri A. Camesano, Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Natalie A Mello, The Forum on Education Abroad
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Student Development
, social, cultural, and economic issues thatare intimately connected to engineering issues and people affected by these engineeringchallenges. One of the most effective ways of providing our students these learning experiencesis through education abroad opportunities. Yet less than 4% of US engineering students studyabroad and there has been little growth in the past two years1. It is also well established that experiential, project/problem-based learning with an emphasison acquiring new knowledge and applying and integrating previous knowledge can be veryeffective structures for enhancing student learning2. These structures engage students in open-ended, ambiguous, authentic activities; and usually involve teams. It is learning that goes
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- Track 3 - Session 2
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- 2014 ASEE International Forum
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Megan Mercedes Echevarria, International Engineering Program, University of Rhode Island; Sigrid -- Berka, University of Rhode Island
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Student Development
Spanish curriculum. She has developed specialized Spanish courses designed for engineers, as well as interdisciplinary courses that connect engineering to other fields of study. In her research she is equally versatile: her scholarship covers a wide range of topics relating to international education, languages across the curriculum, applied linguistics, materials development and literary and cultural studies.Dr. Sigrid – Berka, University of Rhode Island Dr. Sigrid Berka is the Executive Director of the International Engineering Program (IEP) at the Univer- sity of Rhode Island, and also the Director of the German and the Chinese IEP, responsible for building academic programs with exchange partners abroad, internship
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- Track 3 - Session 1
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- 2014 ASEE International Forum
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Kaitlin Litchfield, University of Colorado, Boulder; Amy Javernick-Will, University of Colorado, Boulder; Daniel Knight, University of Colorado, Boulder
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Student Development
the Center from a background in engineering education and applied psychology. Dr. Knight joined CU’s College of Engineering and Applied Science in 2001 after graduate school. He has been a part time associate of DC Colorado since 2007, and became a full-time associate in August, 2013. Dr. Knight’s responsibilities include assessment and program eval- uation of the Center’s hands-on design curriculum, educational research on center development, diversity and teamwork, and team facilitation for the Center’s on-going industry-sponsored teams. Dr. Knight also serves as an educational resource for other departments in the College as well