Engineering professional skills development: imagined lives and real solutions

dc.contributor.author Deller-Evans, Kate
dc.date.accessioned 2012-08-28T05:01:21Z
dc.date.available 2012-08-28T05:01:21Z
dc.date.issued 2012
dc.description.abstract This paper explores how providing real-life narratives can effectively internationalise a curriculum and lead to an enhanced, more engaged student experience. Many first-year Australian university students are being required to confront stories of lives beyond their immediate cultural experience. The annual Engineers without Borders (EWB) Challenge involves them in the authentic task of creating low-cost solutions to a range of actual third-world needs. The national winners then implement their projects in partnership with recipients on site: what was story, previously an exercise in imagination, becomes real. Conceptualising through story is an effective pedagogical pathway to developing student skills so that they can conceptualise real problems in needy communities and create practical solutions. en
dc.identifier.citation Deller-Evans, K, Pope, K., and Tran, A., 2012. Engineering professional skills development: imagined lives and real solutions. 1st Global Conference Storytelling: Global reflections on narrative, 13-15 May 2012, Prague, 1-11. en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2328/26265
dc.language.iso en
dc.oaire.license.condition.license In Copyright
dc.publisher Inter-Disciplinary.Net en
dc.subject Education en
dc.subject Narrative en
dc.subject Engineering en
dc.subject Professional skills en
dc.subject Computer Science en
dc.title Engineering professional skills development: imagined lives and real solutions en
dc.type Presentation en
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