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Cultivating “global competency” in a divided world: A collaborative autoethnography of the cross-border curriculum design

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Conference

2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Baltimore , Maryland

Publication Date

June 25, 2023

Start Date

June 25, 2023

End Date

June 28, 2023

Conference Session

Global Roles and Societal Responsibilities of Engineers

Tagged Division

Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)

Tagged Topic

Diversity

Page Count

24

DOI

10.18260/1-2--42838

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/42838

Download Count

278

Paper Authors

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YiXiang Shawn Sun National Taiwan University Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0001-8724-7716

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Sharon Tsai-hsuan Ku University of Virginia

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Dr. Sharon Ku has dual background in physics and STS, specializing in the sociology of scientific knowledge, standardization, and science policy in the US and China. She works closely with scientists and engineers from academia, government and industry. Dr. Ku received her PhD from History & Philosophy of Science, Cambridge University in 2010, and is currently an assistant professor at Dept. of Engineering & Society, University of Virginia. Before joining UVA. she was a research fellow at National Institutes of Health, and worked for Drexel University as assistant research professor.

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Jongmin Lee University of Science and Technology

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Sean Michael Ferguson CSUCI

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This paper is a joint project of Drs. Sean Ferguson, Sharon Ku, Jongmin Lee, and our amazing RA Yixiang Sun.
Sean Ferguson was Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering and Society's Science, Technology, and Society (STS) Program at the University of Virginia from 2014-2022. He currently has been working with a team at NYCU in Taiwan and UST in Korea to run a global virtual classroom. In addition, with collaborators at California State University Channel Islands and Virginia tech he explores community empowerment for environmental justice, global engineering ethics, critical pedagogy coupled to STS, He specializes in sustainable technology, social movements, and community engagement stemming from a background in Science and Technology Studies.

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Abstract

How should global competency and communication be perceived and taught in a continuously divided world coupled with the ongoing technological sanctions and arms race caused by Russia-Ukraine war and the ongoing US-China-Taiwan frictions? How should the engineering instructors imagine, design, and teach ethics and humanities when more and more engineers are involved in what Giroux (2007) called military-industrial-academic complex due to the geopolitical tensions between the Global North and South? This paper discusses a novel teaching experiment, “Science, Technology and Global Communities: Taiwan-Korea Global Classroom”, to address these questions. Guided by the critical pedagogy research (Giroux 1988), this paper analyzes what and how the official knowledge (Apple, 2014) in traditional Eurocentric engineering education are challenged, and teases out the transformations both instructors and students developed along with the progress of the course. The paper is divided into three parts. First, we illustrate the process of curriculum design as boundary negotiations among instructors from different cultures. The course is a cross-border collaboration between the University of Science and Technology, Korea, and National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University in Taiwan, hosted by four instructors from Taiwan, Korea, and the US. Using “Cold War”, developmentalism, innovation and governance as the core concepts, we co-designed the course structure, ethical and theoretical frameworks, and learning modules from our situated perspectives, helping engineering students to unpack the colonial histories, political ideologies, national building, different innovation models, and forms of governance underneath the development of technology and society in the postwar era. Second, we explain how the curriculum was implemented in an extremely diverse classroom. Several academic and pedagogical attempts have been made to teach global engineering ethics, such as the use of particularist/universalist or top-down/bottom-up approaches. (Zhu and Jesiek 2017; Luegenbiehl and Clancy 2017) In comparison, given a diverse student body from 18 countries in the “Global South” including India, Taiwan, Philippines, and Ecuador, and others, this course hopes to go beyond the existing dichotomic approaches with several pedagogical tools implemented. Third, we discuss the transformation occurring to instructors and students. Using the method of collaborative autoethnography (Heewon, Ngunjiri, and Hernandex 2016), this paper captures the intense dialogues, reflexive moments, as well as disputes, joys and transformations of instructors and students. In addition, data collected from weekly meeting recordings, minutes, and emails, instructors’ reflective journaling, transcripts from interviews with the instructors, and other class materials will also be analyzed to illustrate the trajectories and formation of this joint course, with a particular focus on curriculum design of what a “global engineering classroom” could and should be like. We conclude this paper with some lessons learned for possible teaching and learning alternatives in responding to the growing fragmentation of global order.

Sun, Y. S., & Tsai-hsuan Ku, S., & Lee, J., & Ferguson, S. M. (2023, June), Cultivating “global competency” in a divided world: A collaborative autoethnography of the cross-border curriculum design Paper presented at 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Baltimore , Maryland. 10.18260/1-2--42838

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