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Engaging Aerospace Students with Experiential Learning in Hybrid Project-based Courses

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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

Design in Engineering Education Division (DEED) Technical Session 7

Tagged Division

Design in Engineering Education Division (DEED)

Page Count

21

DOI

10.18260/1-2--43307

Permanent URL

https://strategy.asee.org/43307

Download Count

107

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Paper Authors

biography

Sonia Travaglini Stanford University

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Dr. Sonia Travaglini specializes in the intersection of engineering and active learning, and is an educator passionate about new technologies and collaboration. Sonia enjoys supporting engineering outreach and diversity in engineering.

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biography

Sheri D. Sheppard Stanford University

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Sheri D. Sheppard, Ph.D., P.E., is professor of Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University. Besides teaching both undergraduate and graduate design and education related classes at Stanford University, she conducts research on engineering education and

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biography

Helen L. Chen Stanford University Orcid 16x16 orcid.org/0000-0001-6415-7814

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Helen L. Chen is a research scientist in the Designing Education Lab in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Stanford University. She has been involved in several major engineering education initiatives including the NSF-funded Center for the Advan

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Abstract

As the Stanford Aeronautics & Astronautics project-based Spacecraft Design ‘Capstone’ course returned to in-person instruction, online learning elements that were introduced due to the COVID-19 pandemic were retained to create a hybrid course format. Students were provided with build-it-yourself nano-satellite kits and a range of online technology tools, to work together in teams to solve legitimate ‘mission’ challenges, such as designing a nano-satellite and the mission parameters needed to explore the atmosphere of Mars. Prior evaluation of the use and efficacy of these kits and tools in the previous online course iteration, using Puentedura’s Substitution, Augmentation, Modification, and Redefinition (SAMR) framework, identified elements beneficial for engaging students in experiential learning. These elements were combined with in-person instruction, to create the 2021-2022 hybrid iteration of the Capstone course. This paper explores how the kits and tools were used within the hybrid Capstone course to facilitate students’ engagement with experiential learning and to build communities of practice, and examined their value in supporting students learning. The paper investigated three key pedagogical questions:

1. How do the kits and tools engage students in experiential learning in the hybrid course? 2. How do the kits and tools support students to build a community of practice in the hybrid course? 3. How effective are these compared to the prior online iteration of the courses?

This case study explores these questions through pre- and post-course survey instruments administered to 16 students in the 2021-2022 Spacecraft Design Capstone course, and semi-structured interviews with the course instructors. The class size of 16 included the students in the Aeronautics & Astronautics undergraduate program cohort, which is a smaller program only inaugurated in 2017, along with graduate students taking the Capstone course as an optional course in their Aeronautics & Astronautics Masters program. Students’ self-evaluated engineering competencies were quantitatively analyzed, finding that overall students’ use of kits increased their confidence in their engineering skills, with the most gains seen in developing and integrating electronic components into a complete system, followed by troubleshooting, and in designing a new subsystem or component to meet specified requirements. Puentedura’s SAMR framework was used to interpret the evolution of the use of kits and tools as the course iterated into the hybrid version. Students’ use of technology tools in the hybrid format were used largely as substitutions and augmentations to in-person activities, particularly when seeking support with troubleshooting, and kits were used to modify the tasks needed to tailor to student teams’ chosen space ‘missions’. The hybrid format of the Capstone course proved beneficial in engaging students in experiential learning, being more effective in providing students with a combination of ways to engage with the kits and to connect to communities of practice for student teams and instructors to work together. Future iterations of the course will continue to explore how kits and other technology tools contribute to the hybrid course format while providing students with opportunities to form communities of practice and engage in experiential learning. This case study highlights opportunities for future research into how the use of kits and tools in an Aeronautics & Astronautics undergraduate capstone course can support and enhance student learning.

Travaglini, S., & Sheppard, S. D., & Chen, H. L. (2023, June), Engaging Aerospace Students with Experiential Learning in Hybrid Project-based Courses Paper presented at 2023 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Baltimore , Maryland. 10.18260/1-2--43307

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