Embedding context in teaching engineering design

被引:0
|
作者
机构
[1] Neumeyer, Xaver
[2] Chen, Wei
[3] McKenna, Ann F.
来源
Neumeyer, X. | 2013年 / American Society for Engineering Education卷 / 03期
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Curricula - Life cycle - Product design - History - Teaching;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Understanding the global, societal, environmental and economic (GSEE) context of a product, process or system is critical to an engineer's ability to design and innovate. The already packed curricula in engineering programs provide few occasions to offer meaningful experiences to address this issue, and most departments delegate this requirement to an early cornerstone or later capstone design experience as a result, making these courses an ineffective catch all. To address this challenge, we utilize the paradigm of product archaeology, to understand the decisions that led to a product's development. Product archaeology is defined as the process of reconstructing the lifecycle of a product - the customer requirements, design specifications, and manufacturing processes used to create it. By considering products, processes and systems as designed artifacts with a history rooted in their development, we embed GSEE context as a central component in developing design solutions. In the current work, students focus primarily on the useful life of products and their design solutions, rather than on product end-of-life issues. Specifically, in our work we have implemented several approaches to integrate contextual thinking related to GSEE dimensions into a senior level engineering design course. Following Kolb's model of experiential learning and an instructional framework adapted for product archaeology (inclusive of evaluate-explain - prepare - excavate activities) we have restructured the course to embed specific and targeted reflection, dissection, and analysis activities so that student teams effectively address the GSEE factors in their design solutions. This paper provides the theoretical framework of our instructional approach, describes the specific didactic activities we implemented, and summarizes results from our qualitative analysis. Overall, our results suggest that the use of product dissectionand GSEE activities is an effective way to equip students with new tools to understand contextual, technical, and functional properties of their design projects.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] TEACHING AND TRAINING OF CIVIL ENGINEERING DESIGN
    MATCHETT, E
    HAPPOLD, E
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS, 1969, 42 (MAR): : 451 - &
  • [32] Teaching chemical engineering product design
    Seider, Warren D.
    Widagdo, Soemantri
    [J]. CURRENT OPINION IN CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, 2012, 1 (04) : 472 - 475
  • [33] ENGINEERING CASES AS TOOLS FOR TEACHING DESIGN
    KARDOS, G
    SMITH, CO
    [J]. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, 1983, 105 (03) : 68 - 71
  • [34] Integrating the teaching of engineering science and design
    Cole, D
    [J]. INTEGRATING DESIGN EDUCATION BEYOND 2000, 2000, : 127 - 134
  • [35] The future of computers and the teaching of engineering design
    Spillers, WR
    [J]. AI EDAM-ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FOR ENGINEERING DESIGN ANALYSIS AND MANUFACTURING, 1998, 12 (01): : 79 - 80
  • [36] Engineering design modules teaching by projects
    Lloveras, J
    [J]. SHARING EXPERIENCE IN ENGINEERING DESIGN, 2002, : 185 - 192
  • [37] A TOUCH OF REALITY IN TEACHING ENGINEERING DESIGN
    PURCUPIL.JC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING EDUCATION, 1968, 59 (04) : 286 - &
  • [38] STUDENT CENTERED TEACHING IN ENGINEERING DESIGN
    SAMUEL, AE
    [J]. INSTRUCTIONAL SCIENCE, 1986, 15 (03) : 213 - 238
  • [39] Design of "Software Engineering" Teaching Website
    Li Yuxiang
    Liu Xin
    Zhang Guangbin
    Liu Xingshun
    Gao Zhenbo
    [J]. PIAGENG 2013: INTELLIGENT INFORMATION, CONTROL, AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY FOR AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING, 2013, 8762
  • [40] Teaching mechatronics in industrial design engineering
    Jansen, AJ
    Flipsen, BFJ
    [J]. Design 2004: Proceedings of the 8th International Design Conference, Vols 1-3, 2004, : 639 - 644