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Missing basics presentation at EF2009, 12 November 2009, LaSalle Ramon Llull includes new discussion of iFoundry Fall 2009 results and organization as well as the Olin effect
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What Engineers Dont Learn & Why They Dont Learn It
The Missing Basics:What Engineers Dont Learn & Why They Dont Learn Them
David E. GoldbergIllinois Foundry for Innovation in Engineering EducationUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignUrbana, IL 61801 USAdeg@illinois.edu
David E. Goldberg 2009
Engineering Education Reform in the Air
Personal context: Transformation in a tough neighborhood.Engineering education incomplete & many calls for reform.Many lists the same: More design, people skills, communication. But little or local change. Faculty resist soft skills as not rigorous.Argue problem is in part philosophical and in part organizational:Engineering does not understand itself well enough to cultivate its young.School structure needs practical reform to permit kaizen and community.Paint coherent systems picture of effective change. Change minds & organizations.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Roadmap
Industrial-sposored senior design: What dont they know how to do?7 qualitative thinking skills for unlocking the joy of engineering (JoE).3 misconceptions that hold us back from JoE.From JoE to joy of community (JoC) with iCommunity.From old school teaching to joy of learning (JoL).Academic change as a NIMBY problem.iFoundry: Organizational change for educational innovation. 75 amazing freshmen and the Olin effect.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Begin with the End in Mind: Senior Design
Senior design as way to see the end.Joined General Engineering at University of Illinois 20 years ago.A key reason: Wanted to teach industrial-sponsored senior design.Grinter report of 1955: more math & science, less design.Illinois program started with Ford Foundation grant 1966.Money ran out 1971 and industrial funding supports thereafter.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Stephen R. Covey (b. 1932)
A Special Moment: Ready, Set, Go
These are seniors.Should be engineers on the threshold.Top cold war engineering education.Express preferences for projects.Get assigned to a project: 3-member teams & faculty advisor.Go on the plant trip.Query: What dont they know how to do?20 years of coaching, heres my list.
David E. Goldberg 2009
5
Failure 1: Inability to Ask
Dont know how to frame or ask good questions.Difficulty probing the problem.Trouble querying what has been tried.Problem learning about vendors and sources of information.Historical terms: Socrates 101.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Socrates (470-399 BCE)
Failure 2: Inability to Label
Dont know names of common systems, assemblies, and components of technology.Engineering graduates as technologically illiterate.Worse: Difficulty labeling new artifact concepts or models.Example: burnt flour problem.Mainly comfortable with familiar categories and objects.Historical terms: Aristotle 101.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Aristotle (384-322 BCE)
Failure 3: Inability to Model
Dont know how to model conceptually:As causal chain.As categorical list of types or kinds.Pavlovian dogs when it comes to equations.Need to understand problem qualitatively in words and diagrams prior to quantitative modeling undertaking.Historical terms: Hume 101 or Aristotle 102.
David E. Goldberg 2009
David Hume (1711-1776)
Failure 4: Inability to Decompose
Dont know how to decompose big problem into little problems.Looking for magic bullets in equations of motion.Most projects too hard: Companies dont pay $9500 for plugging into Newtons laws.Historical terms: Descartes 101?
David E. Goldberg 2009
Ren Descartes (1596-1650)
Failure 5: Inability to Measure
Dont know how to measure stuff or collect data.Engineering taught as abstract math/science exercise.Ignore benefit of direct measurement.Historical terms: Locke 101 or Bacon 101?
David E. Goldberg 2009
John Locke (1632-1704)
Failure 6: Inability to Visualize/Ideate
Dont know how to draw sketches or diagrams when helpful.Have trouble envisioning solutions.Graphics education greatly diminished.Historical terms: da Vinci or Monge 101.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Failure 7: Inability to Communicate
Finally finish the project.Dont know how to present or write for business.What we have here is a failure to communicate.Historical terms: Newman 101.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Paul Newman (1925-2008)
The Basics versus the Missing Basics
The Basics: math-science death march followed by engineering science.Missing basics (MBs): questioning, labeling, modeling conceptually, decomposing, measuring, visualizing/ideating, & communicating. MBs as more basic than the basics.No surprise: 5th century BC in Athens as pivotal place & moment in human thinking.Missing basics covers thinking skills critical to engineers: design, communications, people skills.Complete engineering education leads to joy of engineering.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Do Engineers Need the Missing Basics?
Yes!! But why dont they get them.Three conceptual misunderstandings block joy of engineering:Engineering is mainly math & science.World is hierarchical & specialized. Qualitative skills important for well roundedness, not engineering.From joy of engineering to two more joys.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Engineering: Just Math & Science Applied?
Usual: Engineering is applied math & science.Other views:Von Karman: A scientist discovers that which exists. An engineer creates that which never was.Koen: Engineering is heuristics.Pitt: Technology is humanity at work.Mesthene: Technology is the organization of knowledge for achievement of practical purpose.Here: Engineering is the social practice of conceiving, designing, implementing, producing, & sustaining functionally complex artifacts, processes, or systems appropriate to some recognized need.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Same Old World: Hierarchical & Specialized?
Usual: Engineer as narrow & specialized category enhancer in hierarchical, domestic organization. Paradigm OK for WW2 & Cold War.Now a creative era, a flat world. Missed revolutions since WW2:Quality revolution.Entrepreneurial revolution.IT revolution.Here: engineer as interdisciplinary, integrative category creator in flat, global organization.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Qualitative Skills Needed to be Well-Rounded?
Usual: Qualitative skills developed in humanities & SS courses make well-rounded or cultured individuals.Here: Missing basics essential to being a great engineer.Seek qual-quant balance to make great engineers.
David E. Goldberg 2009
The Joy(s) of Engineering (JoE)
These misconceptions block achieving the joy of engineering qua engineering.Engineering reduced to merely technical analysis vs. engineering as creative, integrative enterprise serving human needs. 3 iFoundry student aspirations:Create cool technology (products & services)Wannabe the next Max Levchin (entrepreneurial).Want to create sustainable world & solve societal problems (service)New class: ENG 100 ++, Intro to Missing Basics of Engineering.
From JoE to JoC (Joy of Community)
Clich of cold war engineering education.Engin profs used to say the following:Look to your left. Look to your right.One of the three of you wont make it!Statistically correct: 50%-70% survive.Pedagogically improper. Why take pride in failure of capable students?Assumption: Rugged individuals must survive selective weed out process to be successful.
Research Shows Otherwise
Russ Kortes work on transitions:College to workHS to CollegeSingle most important variable in transition success social connectedness (SC).Critical element of iFoundry is what we call iCommunity.
Russell Korte
iCommunity
Student-run learning community.iLaunch with team ropes course in Fall 2009.75 students in 4 iTeams, elected iChairs. Cooperate to perform 4 functions: academics, service, social/identity, world of work. iCheckpoint/iExpoEach team supported by iFA, iSA, and iCOA
4 iTeams aligned with student aspirations:Art & engineering design (AED).Services & systems engineering (SSE).Entrepreneurship & innovation (EI).Engineering in service of society (ESS).
David E. Goldberg 2009
Look to Left & Right: iFoundry Version
Try it again:Look to your left. Look to your right.In iFoundry those two people crucial supporters to help you complete a challenging learning experience.iLaunch is primarily about the joy of community.Not an accident that we start with this.iCommunity calculus: How can we form a supportive group and become great engineers together?
What Needed for Joy of Community?
What skills necessary to become tight knit supportive community?Need to probe and ask questions of others.Need to label challenging people problems.Need to create and communicate.You need the missing basics!!!Joy of community, teamwork, leadership, facilitated by mastery of the missing basics.
Teaching: Another Blast from the Past
In old model, students were passive vessels.Professors poured knowledge into their brains.Assumes static world of engineers as category enhancers.Three flavors of iStudent as category creators:Cool new technology.Entrepreneurs & innovators.Working with developing cultures.Common thread: Need to create new stuff & need to keep learning.Learning in creative era is never ending enterprise.
Research on Tech Visionaries as Clue
Helpful to look at extreme exemplars of success.Price, Vojak, & Griffin have done work on tech visionaries (TVs).TV creates bottom line revenue from new products & services.T-shaped person both broad and deep.TVs are dynamic Ts.Do deep dive in unfamiliar area to make new products.
Ray Price
How to Be a Joyful Lifelong Learner?
What skills do you need to be a dynamic T or lifelong learner?Need to ask framing questions.Need to learn lingo of new areas & connect to things understood.Need to collect data in new situation.Need to come up with creative solutions appropriate to situation.You guessed it. The missing basics are the key.
A Vision with Systemic Coherence
Taken together three joysJoE, JoC, JoLcan help align engineering education with the times.Missing basics tie all three together: Critical & creative thinking skills cut across joy of engineering, community & learning.iCommunity provides social connectedness to provide student self-reliance and commitment.So what holding us back?
We Have Met the Enemy & He is Us
David E. Goldberg 2009
Famous Pogo cartoon.Trash-strewn forrest.Yep, son, we have met the enemy and he is us.Applies to engin ed.Organizational dynamics & faculty as key obstacle to change.
Academic Change is a NIMBY Problem
Academic NIMBY problem.NIMBY = Not in my backyard.It is OK to change the curriculum.just dont change MY course.Politics of logrolling: You support my not changing. I support your not changing.Even though agreement for change is widespread, specific changes are resisted.
David E. Goldberg 2009
Organizational Innovation for Change
Illinois Foundry for Innovation in Engineering Education (iFoundry):Curriculum change incubator. Permit change.Collaboration. Large, key ugrad programs work together. Easier approval if shared. Connections. Hook to depts, NAE, ABET (?), industry. Volunteers. Enthusiasm for change among participants. Existing authority. Use signatory authority for modification of curricula for immediate pilot. Respect faculty governance. Get pilot permission from the dept. and go back to faculty for vote after pilot changeAssessment. Built-in assessment to overcome objections back home. Scalability. Past attempts at change like Olin fail to scale at UIUC and other big schools. www.ifoundry.illinois.edu
David E. Goldberg 2009
iFoundry Institutional View
iFoundry components:iSteering: Coordinate iFoundry & College leadership.iCommunity: Student-run engineering learning community.iFoundry Council: Coordinates iFoundry with academic departments.Olin-Illinois Partnership: Coordinates Illinois with Olin College and engineering education establishment.3SpaceStudios: Exposes iFoundry ideas and practices to general public.
Admitted First iFoundry Freshmen 2009
David E. Goldberg 2009
iFoundry grassroots phase Summer 07.College activity Fall 08.75 freshmen iLaunch on August 22, 2009 with overnight retreat.iTeam selections and iChair elections that week. iCheckpoint October 14, 2009.Socially connected.Missing basics internalized.Projects help establish engineering identity.Calling shots on what iCommunity and iTeams do.Surprising changes.
AED iChair: Claire Slupski
Surprise!! Olin Effect on a Budget
Went to Franklin W. Olin College first time February 2008.Moving experience: Talked to freshmen during heat-sink measurements.Pride in engineering.Confidence & boldness.Seeing this Olin Effect in our freshmen.Even though curriculum & pedagogy is still largely the same.Can we get important change with small number of strategic moves?
David E. Goldberg 2009
Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering
ColdWar Version
iFoundry Version
Postwar stability
Missed revolutions
Category enhancer
Category creator
The basics
Themissing basics
Narrow specialist
DynamicT
Rigor= math/science rigor
Rigor= conceptual rigor
Soft skills mysterious
Soft skillsenumerable,learnable & rigorous
Math-Scideath march: passage rite
Design challenge: passage rite
Engineers as sociallycaptive
Engineers as visionariesor leaders
Summary: Conceptual Shifts
EnginSchoolVersion
iFoundry Version
Changeas local,incremental & episodic.
Change as systemic, transformative&continuing.
Isolated center/institute/dept as locus.
Dot-connecting incubatoras locus.
Plan-implementas mode.
Ongoingpilot & diffusion as mode.
Individual units innovate separately
Units collaborate on pilots.
One size fits all & override governance during change.
Respectdiversityofculture & governanceduring change.
Closed stagnation as usual.
Openinnovation as usual.
Isolated from key stakeholders.
Connectedto key stakeholders.
Faculty-centered process.
Student-centered process.
Summary: Organizational Shifts
Bottom Line
Philosophical reflection key torighting past errorsdeveloping coherent transformative vision conceptual rigor for subjects otherwise rejected as soft.Organizational reconfiguration necessary toachieve social connectedness among studentspermit ongoing pilot and change. To soon to be sure, but changes so far may be yielding boldness, confidence & engineering identity with fewer resources than previously thought.Can make effective change in tough neighborhood.
David E. Goldberg 2009
More Information
iFoundry: http://ifoundry.illinois.edu Talk: http://www.slideshare.net/deg511 EotF2.0: http://engineerofthefuture.olin.eduiFoundry YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/illinoisfoundryiFoundry SlideShare: http://www.slideshare.net/ifoundry TEE, the book. http://eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0470007230.html fPET-2010: www.philengtech.org or www.twitter.com/philengtech Twitter: www.twitter.com/deg511, www.twitter.com/ifoundry
David E. Goldberg 2009
fPET-2010: Philosophy & Engineering
2010 Forum on Philosophy, Engineering & Technology (fPET-2010), 9-10 May 2010, Sunday evening to Monday, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO.One-day intensive event.50-50 philosophers and engineers.Grows out of earlier events WPE-2007 & WPE-2008.www.philengtech.org
David E. Goldberg 2009
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