Informing engineering education for sustainable development using a deliberative dynamic model for curriculum renewal
Keywords
099999 Engineering not elsewhere classified130103 Higher Education
130202 Curriculum and Pedagogy Theory and Development
130212 Science Technology and Engineering Curriculum and Pedagogy
HERN
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http://eprints.qut.edu.au/70569/Abstract
Literature from around the world clearly suggests that engineering education has been relatively slow to incorporate significant knowledge and skill areas, including the rapidly emerging area of sustainable development. Within this context, this paper presents the findings of research that questioned how engineering educators could consistently implement systematic and intentional curriculum renewal that is responsive to emerging engineering challenges and opportunities. The paper presents a number of elements of systematic and intentional curriculum renewal that have been empirically distilled from a qualitative multiple-method iterative research approach including literature review, narrative enquiry, pilot trials and peer-review workshops undertaken by the authors with engineering educators from around the world. The paper also presents new knowledge arising from the research, in the form of a new model that demonstrates a dynamic and deliberative mechanism for strategically accelerating for curriculum renewal efforts. Specifically the paper discusses implications of this model to achieve education for sustainable development, across all disciplines of engineering. It concludes with broader research and practice implications for the field of education research.Date
2011Type
Conference PaperIdentifier
oai:eprints.qut.edu.au:70569http://eprints.qut.edu.au/70569/