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SUMMARY

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Title: SUMMARY


1
SUMMARY Ed Crawley Johan Malmqvist CDIO External
Review 19 June 2003
2
SUMMARY
  • We have begun a major, long-term effort to change
    the nature and the fundamental culture of
    engineering education
  • In three years, the CDIO Initiative has led to
  • Major changes to the program of instruction at
    all four universities
  • New learning environments/workshops at all
    universities
  • A preliminary set of curriculum, teaching and
    learning, workshop and assessment products that
    facilitate the adoption of the CDIO model by
    other universities
  • The adoption of the CDIO principles by several
    new partner universities
  • A foundation for future reforms within and beyond
    our universities

3
OUTLINE
  • Review of vision and major deliverables
  • Impact on our programs, students, faculty,
    industry and other universities
  • The benefits of our collaboration
  • Plans for Years 4 to 6
  • Funding
  • Closing

4
CDIO INITIATIVE IMPACT AND OUTPUTS
Impact on student education worldwide
ULTIMATEGOAL
Impact on other programs
Impact on our programs
INTERMEDIATE GOAL
EDUCATIONAL GOALS
Curriculum
T L
W/L
Assessment
OUTPUTS
DELIVERABLES
Faculty Competence
5
CDIO INITIATIVE OUTPUTS
Educational Goals
Curriculum
T L
W/L
A E
Models for the design and utilization of
workshops/labs
Authentic experiences that support disciplinary
and CDIO skills
Models for curriculum structure and design
Tools and processes for program evaluation
Program
Curricular materials and introductory courses for
CDIO education
Tools and processes for assessing student
achievement
Design - build educational experiences
Active, experiential learning with enhanced
feedback
Student Experience
6
1. Principle that CDIO is the Context
Existing faculty TL competence
Existing learning spaces
Existing curriculum
Existing assessment evaluation
2. CDIO Syllabus survey and learning objectives
Survey of assessment and program evaluation
Faculty survey on teaching, learning and
assessment
Curriculum benchmarking
Lab/workshop space survey
Identify best practice and possible innovation
Identifying opportunities to improve TL
Design curricular assignment of CDIO topics
Design workshops and usage mode
Design assessment evaluation framework
10. Enhance faculty competence in teaching and
learning, and in assessment
9. Enhance faculty competence in personal,
interpersonal and system building
6. Workshop development
12. Program evaluation
3. Curricular Design
7. Authentic learning experiences
4. Introductory course
8. Active learning
11. Student assessment
5. Design-build Courses
Program operation and student learning
7
IMPACT CHAIN
Impact on oureducationalprograms
Impact on our students
Impact on industry
Plan develop
Impact on our faculty
Impact on other programs
Impact on other students
Impact on other faculty
Impact on educational agencies
8
IMPACT ON OUR PROGRAMS
  • Substantial reform of the curriculum at the four
    universities
  • Learning objectives have been set based on the
    CDIO Syllabus
  • Learning experiences to meet these objectives
    have been integrated into the curricula
  • Strong presence of project-based learning,
    including teamwork skills and project management
  • Introductory project courses and capstone
    projects have been developed and implemented
  • Systematic introduction of improved teaching and
    learning methods
  • Thorough investigation of teaching and learning
    in CDIO programs
  • Innovative teaching methods, such as concept
    questions, dialogue-based learning have been
    introduced
  • Strong student involvement, investigations of
    student learning, teaching learning workshops
    for students, statement of 10 requests from
    students

9
IMPACT ON OUR PROGRAMS (cont.)
  • Creation of new workshops/laboratories and
    hands-on educational models
  • New workshops/laboratories built at the four
    universities
  • A large number of design-build learning
    experiences developed
  • Creation of assessment processes to demonstrate
    improvement
  • New assessment methods have been introduced,
    focusing on both technical understanding and CDIO
    skills
  • Entry and exit surveys that specifically address
    CDIO skills
  • Longitudinal studies of student learning and
    satisfaction

10
IMPACT AND THE CDIO STANDARDS
11
IMPACT ON OUR ULTIMATE CUSTOMERS STUDENTS
  • CDIO programs
  • Develop a deeper working knowledge of the
    technical fundamentals
  • Develop CDIO skills
  • Are motivating, stimulating, and fun
  • Scope of effects of CDIO programs
  • As of June 2003 our four programs ( 500
    students/year)
  • By September 2004 current partners ( 800
    students/year)
  • By September 2006 early adopters (2000-3000
    students/year)

12
QUOTATIONS FROMEND-OF-COURSE SURVEYS
  • I think CDIO is an extremely valuable way for us
    to learn about lab experiments, teamwork, and
    being a part of a large complex systems
    engineering project. (MIT SEF Fall 02)
  • The course managed to tie up our specialization
    in Mechatronics in a splendid way, one of the
    main goals with the course. The fact that we had
    to use our knowledge from different areas within
    the program, such as modeling, simulation,
    programming, electronics, was highly appreciated
    (Chalmers, Mechatronics project course)
  • Finally, I would just like to add that this is
    the most rewarding courseI have ever done as a
    student!! (KTH, Vehicle Engineering capstone
    course)
  • We have understood the importance of a well
    working communication and cooperation and that
    you must trust each other It is a positive
    experience to find out that you can use your
    knowledge to design an advanced computer
    controlled machine(LiU, Electronics project
    course)

13
EXIT INTERVIEWS WITH MIT GRADUATES
  • Graduates from 2000 and 2001 reported major
    growth during their education in their abilities
    to
  • Function on multidisciplinary teams
  • Communicate using oral progress reports
  • Give technical briefings with competence, poise,
    and confidence
  • Graduates from 2002 and 2003
  • Described CDIO activities as major highlights of
    their programs and overall MIT experience
  • Reported that they had developed the requisite
    skills for working on a team from project
    conception through operation
  • Recognized the value of the new laboratory
    facilities in fostering a strong sense of
    community

14
IMPACT ON INDUSTRY
  • Voices from industry having MSc thesis students
    from Chalmers project course in Mechatronics
  • Excellent students and excellent work! Send more
    of that caliber! (SKF-ERC, The Netherlands)
  • The result was far beyond our expectations.
    (Teleca, Sweden(
  • Fourth-year design-build experience products at
    MIT are viewed by industry reviewers as being
    comparable to professional design studies.
  • Mats Öberg, senior project manager, Flextronics
    on Linköpings Electronics project course
  • It is very valuable that the students take part
    in a design project already during the education,
    where they learn how a development project is
    controlled and executed in a group with a
    significant number of people It is evident that
    the electronics project course creates a great
    personal engagement, by the content of the task,
    but also by the way of work. Project management
    skills have earlier often been missing among new
    engineers.

15
IMPACT ON FACULTY
  • Implementing a CDIO education requires actions to
    enhance faculty competence in
  • Personal, interpersonal and product/system
    building skills
  • Active and experiential teaching and learning,
    and assessment
  • A large number of workshops for faculty education
    have taken place, addressing aspects such as
    Assessment, Writing Learning Objectives,
    Reflective Teaching using Critical Friends, the
    LIPS project model and Teamwork
  • Faculty quotes
  • The students are more motivated. (Chalmers)
  • "The (vehicle engineering) project generated an
    urge for knowledge. (KTH)
  • Much closer contact with the students, More
    engaged students. (LiU)
  • Workshop experiences provide better
    faculty-student communication and interactions.
    (MIT)

16
INTEREST AND ACTION BY OTHERS NEW PARTNERS
  • New partner universities have formally joined the
    CDIO Initiative
  • The Technical University of Denmark, Mechanical
    EngineeringLars Hein, Head of Department We
    need the focus, the dialogue, to know about tips
    and tricks, and help with a number of tasks (but
    you have the starter kits for that!) We would
    like to offer what we do, to compare, and to
    contribute .... and we would like to join you in
    the search for proof of the effects of CDIO.
  • United States Naval Academy, Aerospace
    EngineeringCapt. Rob Niewoehner, Head of
    Department We began to move haphazardly
    towards a CDIO-like program before hearing of
    CDIO. We join the CDIO Initiative because it
    provides a framework for systematic development
    and expansion of activities
  • South Africa has expressed considerable interest
  • Zola Mbanguta, National Chief Engineering and
    Technology Education Specialist, SA National
    Department of Education, Pretoria
  • A number of potential new partners have
    participated in CDIO meetings

17
IMPACT ON EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES
  • The National Agency of Higher Education at KTH
    (2002)
  • MMT 2003 is a success story. Good and clear
    reporting and a very well working dialogue with
    students and all concerned both within and
    outside the university. Bravo! Regarding
    objectives interesting things are happening
    through the changes in the MMT area, where
    increased importance is given to developing
    objectives.
  • The National Agency for Higher Education at LiU
    (2002)
  • CDIO is one of the real highlights of higher
    education at LiU.
  • The American Board of Engineering and Technology
    at MIT (2001)
  • an outstanding set of published educational
    goals, objectives, and outcomes The CDIO
    approach is a significant program strength.

18
BENEFITS OF THE COLLABORATION
  • Built a firm base for educational reform through
    development of surveys and benchmarks
  • Created a number of transferable results
    Starter Kits, models, processes
  • Helped sharpen our definitions of key concepts,
    such as the CDIO Standards, and the associated
    tools for continuous improvement
  • Raised the level of ambition for educational
    development at our universities and fostered
    friendly competition toward common goals
  • Provided arguments for the anchoring of the new
    ideas at our universities, i.e. We are not alone
    in doing this.

19
PLANS FOR YEAR 4
  • Continue implementation of the CDIO model at our
    universities, emphasizing measurement of effects,
    continuous improvement, and faculty competence
    development
  • Take action on areas needing improvement
    identified through CDIO self-certification
  • Launch major dissemination effort
  • Use the Starter Kits as a basis for outreach
    workshops
  • Engage new partner universities by
  • actively involving them in hosting meetings and
    leading theme groups
  • using the CDIO curriculum design tools to start
    their transition process
  • beta testing new materials and processes
  • Introduce the CDIO model to the South African
    educational system
  • Document and publish the results of our
    experiences

20
PLANS FOR YEARS 5 and 6
  • Follow up and continuously improve the CDIO model
    at all partner universities
  • Continue development from transitional to
    established CDIO programs
  • Gather assessment data to prove the effectiveness
    of the CDIO model
  • Develop and incorporate continuous improvements
    in the CDIO materials
  • Plan, develop and implement the CDIO model at new
    partner universities and future adopter schools
  • Document and publish our CDIO approach to
    reforming engineering education
  • Start a number of new projects
  • Gender-inclusive engineering education
  • Integration between mathematics and technical
    subjects
  • Application of the CDIO model to graduate
    education
  • Entrepreneurship, business opportunities,
    startups
  • Assessment of difficult-to-measure CDIO learning
    outcomes

21
WIDESPREAD ADOPTION PLAN
MIT
Chalmers, KTH LiU
New partners
Future adopters
22
WALLENBERG FUNDING
  • Is a critical element of the CDIO Initiative
    support, supplemented by major contributions from
    university funding and other sources
  • Extends scope and expands activities far beyond
    what universities and small grants could
    accomplish in educational change
  • Without the funding, neither the renewal of the
    curriculum, in particular the new project
    courses, nor the building of the
    workshops/laboratories would have been possible.
  • Yields distinct benefits to Sweden
  • Education of product-focused engineers and
    engineering scientists to work on complex system
    development
  • Close cooperation among engineering schools and
    with IVA
  • Leadership in the world educational community

23
CONTINUED FUNDING
  • First-year startup funding provided for Chalmers,
    LiU and MIT
  • Subsequent funding financed initiatives at the
    four universities for Years 2 and 3
  • Funding for Year 4 will make it possible to
  • Advance the curriculum, teaching and learning,
    workshop, assessment development
  • Continue the creation of the deliverables, e.g.,
    processes, Starter Kits, IRMs
  • Beta test new models, processes, and products at
    new partner universities
  • Funding for Years 5 and 6 will make it possible
    to
  • Follow up and continuously improve the CDIO model
    at all partner universities and prove the
    effectiveness of the CDIO model
  • Address a number of new issues, including
    gender-inclusive engineering education
  • Disseminate our approaches to additional
    universities
  • Document and publish our CDIO approach to
    reforming engineering education

24
CLOSING
  • Major changes in engineering education are
    critical to our technology-based future.
  • We have developed the CDIO model to address these
    issues.
  • Adoption of the CDIO model has the potential of
    fundamentally changing the culture of engineering
    education at leading universities.
  • We have formed an effective international team
    and made substantial progress towards this goal.
  • A great deal of effort lies ahead if we are to
    have lasting widespread impact.
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