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Engineering education and the development of expertise

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by T Litzinger, L Lattuca, Roger Hadgraft, W Newstetter
BACKGROUND: Although engineering education has evolved in ways that improve the readiness of graduates to meet the challenges of the twenty-first century, national and international organizations continue to call for change. Future changes in engineering education should be guided by research on expertise and the learning processes that support its development. PURPOSE: The goals of this paper are: to relate key findings from studies of the development of expertise to engineering education, to summarize instructional practices that are consistent with these findings, to provide examples of learning experiences that are consistent with these instructional practices, and finally, to identify challenges to implementing such learning experiences in engineering programs. SCOPE/METHOD: The research synthesized for this article includes that on the development of expertise, students’ approaches to learning, students’ responses to instructional practices, and the role of motivation in learning. In addition, literature on the dominant teaching and learning practices in engineering education isused to frame some of the challenges to implementing alternative approaches to learning. CONCLUSION: Current understanding of expertise, and the learning processes that develop it, indicates that engineering education should encompass a set of learning experiences that allow students to construct deep conceptual knowledge, to develop the ability to apply key technical and professional skills fluently, and to engage in anumber of authentic engineering projects. Engineering curricula and teaching methods are often not well aligned with these goals. Curriculum-level instructional design processes should be used to design and implement changes that will improve alignment.

History

Volume

100

Issue

1

Start Page

123

End Page

150

Number of Pages

28

eISSN

2168-9830

ISSN

1069-4730

Location

USA

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Georgia Institute of Technology; Pennsylvania State University; TBA Research Institute; University of Melbourne;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Journal of engineering education.

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