生物医学工程学生透过合作课程的感知学习

C. Jamison, L.R. Lattuca, S. Daly, A. Huang-Saad
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摘要

背景:课外学生成果研究的重点是将结果与基于课外类型的活动联系起来。很少有人研究这些课外活动的哪些方面会导致学生的成绩。目的:我们的研究旨在确定与学生专业、职业或个人成果发展相关的课外活动的共同要素,并为我们如何研究和设计工程领域的课外活动提供信息。设计:我们从一个生物医学工程(BME)项目中招募参与者。我们对14名高级BME学生进行了为期一年的四次半结构化访谈,以探讨学生对课外学习的看法。使用定性的因果分析方法,我们确定了学生在研究或多学科设计团队中的课外经历的元素,以及其他课外经历(例如,实习,专业社团),这些经历与专业,职业或个人学习成果相关,这些成果在以前被认为是工程教育中重要的。研究发现:我们通过参与者活动(我们称之为“参与者行动”)确定了独特的“体验元素”和各种“结果类别”之间的联系模式。最普遍的联系——那些与多个结果类别相关的经验元素和参与者行动——包括经验元素独立项目工作、涉及多学科的项目工作、STEM教育机会、技术人员的指导以及参与者行动反思经验。我们发现了领导力、设计、商业、跨学科能力、学科能力、沟通和职业方向结果等结果类别之间的联系。结论:基于我们的研究结果,教育工作者和导师应该考虑在项目中支持学生决策自主和多学科互动的价值,以支持学习。他们还可以为学生提供相互教授技术内容的机会,接受结构化的指导,并在他们发生的时候反思他们的经验。此外,这项工作表明需要以新的方式探索课外学习过程,从而更好地理解学生的学习过程。
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Biomedical Engineering Students’ Perceived Learning Through Co-Curriculars
Background: Co-curricular student outcomes research has focused on connecting outcomes to activities based on the co-curricular type. Less work has explored what aspects of those co-curricular activities could lead to student outcomes. Purpose: Our research aimed to identify common elements of co-curricular activities that connected to students’ development of professional, career, or personal outcomes and can inform how we study and design co-curricular activities in engineering. Design: We recruited participants from one biomedical engineering (BME) program. We used a one-year series of four semi-structured interviews with fourteen upper-level BME students to explore students’ perceptions of their co-curricular learning. Using a qualitative, causal analysis approach, we identified elements of students’ co-curricular experiences in research or a multi-disciplinary design team, as well as other co-curricular experiences (e.g., internships, professional societies), that linked to professional, career, or personal learning outcomes that have been previously identified as important in engineering education. Findings: We identified patterns of connections between unique “experience elements” and a variety of “outcome categories” through participant activities we called “participant actions.” The most prevalent connections—those experience elements and participant actions that connected to multiple outcome categories—included the experience elements Independent Project Work, Project Work That Engages Multiple Disciplines, STEM Education Opportunities, and Mentorship from a Skilled Other as well as a participant action Reflecting on Experience. We found connections to the outcome categories of Leadership, Design, Business, Interdisciplinary Competence, Disciplinary Competence, Communication, and Career Direction Outcomes. Conclusions: Based on our findings, educators and mentors should consider the value of supporting students’ decision-making autonomy and multidisciplinary interactions in projects to support learning. They could also incorporate opportunities for students to teach each other technical content, receive structured mentorship, and reflect on their experiences as they are happening. Further, this work demonstrates a need to explore co-curricular learning processes in new ways that can lead to better understandings of students’ learning processes.
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