teaching strategies implemented by the teaching team providedeffective options in the absence of certain hands-on experiences that are considered critical toengineering capstone design courses. A discussion on these teaching strategies in the contextbeyond the pandemic are considered in the discussion.IntroductionEngineering capstone design courses provide students with a team-based project experience inaddressing an open-ended, real-world, unmet need. In the Engineering Innovation in Health(EIH) capstone design program at the University of Washington (UW), multidisciplinary studentteams design, construct, and test a technical innovation to address a pressing unmet needproposed by a health care professional [1], [2]. During this process, they
technical merits or impacts of their work, but to also consider the social, health,political, and/or environmental impacts of their work. This analysis of the context in whichengineering research and solutions are embedded is not commonly done in engineering, wherethe technical aspects are often divorced from the societal aspects [20]. The question of how toteach researchers to make these connections is not settled, but there is an increasing number ofresources showing how engineering and social justice are connected: • General engineering and social justice o Free Radicals “Science Under the Scope” [21] o Donna Riley’s Engineering and Social Justice book [22] o Caroline Baillie’s “Engineering and Social Justice