into depth yet giving essentialknowledge to the students was still sought.In this paper, we have presented our experience of designing and teaching a new introductorycourse for undergraduate students of Department of Electrical Engineering at The University ofLahore, Pakistan. First, objectives and design basis of the course will be discussed. This will befollowed by course details, syllabus, learning and assessment methodology. A survey wasconducted among students who enrolled this course from Fall 2012 to Fall 2014 to get theirfeedback on usefulness of this course. Results of the survey are discussed at the end.2 Objectives and basis of design of the courseTable 1 Prominent areas of Biomedical Engineering pertaining to ECEArea of Study
subset of therequired courses in the program.This analysis is performed and reported by the PAO and instructor of each course. Theyestablish the instruments to be used to assess each outcome. These are typically questionsembedded in student assignments, exams, interviews, questionnaires` or other evaluativemechanisms. PAO also supplies the relevant statistics for the course. These include thenumber of students, the grading scale and the average score for the embedded question, thepercentage of students who achieved the outcome. Finally, the course instructor makes anyrelevant comments regarding the achievement of the outcome. In addition, he prepares a set ofcourse materials, which includes the course syllabus, copies of the instruments used to
), engineering education (through MasseyUniversity, New Zealand) and humanitarian engineering (through Coventry University, UK).Through its international platform, the purpose is to examine key areas where engineeringcan be harnessed to improve humanitarian and development outcomes. These areas are to:develop resource materials that are appropriate, culturally-relevant, that promote effectivepractice; deliver an international postgraduate course specifically in the area of humanitarianengineering; develop outreach programmes at all levels that encompasses pre-school throughto industrial professional development.This paper describes the initial process of the UNESCO UNITWIN’s formation followed bya description of how two of the collaborators have