Abstract

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has been collaborating since 2010 with the Singapore Ministry of Education to help develop the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD). One element of this collaboration, the Global Leadership Program (GLP), aims to provide SUTD students with the opportunity to interact with the MIT community and experience MIT’s academic culture. During GLP students participate in a program designed to develop leadership ability while also increasing their understanding of engineering science and design thinking. This paper introduces a curriculum combining the pedagogies of design-based learning and wilderness education that was implemented in the summer of 2014 to holistically address the development of these three competencies. Through design-based learning activities, both for and in a natural environment, students were encouraged to develop competencies in engineering science and engineering design while exploring the diverse attributes essential for success as an engineer. This paper examines the results of a retrospective post-then-pre survey administered to the participants upon completion of the program to explore the effects of the program on the development of professional engineering competencies. We find a statistically significant increase in items associated with Individual Leadership Skill, Group Leadership Skill and the role of Society and the Economy. These results are triangulated with student exit interviews and instructor observations.

Highlights

  • The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has been collaborating since 2010 with the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) to help develop the latter’s curriculum and educational programs

  • During Global Leadership Program (GLP), students participate in a program that assists in the development of engineering science and engineering design competencies alongside professional competencies

  • This paper introduces a component of GLP that combines the pedagogical approaches of design-based learning and wilderness education to create a novel learning environment for engineering students

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Summary

Introduction

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has been collaborating since 2010 with the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD) to help develop the latter’s curriculum and educational programs This collaboration aims “to accomplish the development of a new engineering-oriented university that will reach the Engineer of 2020 vision, while in parallel addressing the timely formation of an institutional identity and culture that borrows from those of MIT” [1]. Through this collaboration, MIT is involved in faculty training, the development and deployment of curricula, and supporting student life related initiatives such as the development of co-curricular and leadership activities [1]–[4].

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