Abstract

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, universities across the world have curtailed face to face teaching. Associated with this is the halt to the delivery of the practical experience required of engineering students. The Multidisciplinary Engineering Education (MEE) team at The University of Sheffield have responded to this problem in an efficient and effective way by recording laboratory experiences and putting videos, quizzes and data online for students to engage with. The focus of this work was on ensuring all Learning Outcomes (LOs) for modules and courses were preserved. Naturally, practical skills cannot be easily provided using this approach, but it is an effective way of getting students to interact with real data, uncertainty and equipment which they cannot access directly. A number of short case studies from across the range of engineering disciplines are provided to inspire and guide other educators in how they can move experiments on line in an efficient and effective manner. No student feedback is available at the time of writing, but anecdotal evidence is that this approach is at least acceptable for students and a way of collecting future feedback is suggested. The effort expended on this approach and the artefacts produced will support student learning after the initial disruption of the lockdown has passed.

Highlights

  • IntroductionFace to face teaching stopped, the way that most universities teach has been disrupted

  • With lockdowns implemented globally, and face to face teaching stopped, the way that most universities teach has been disrupted

  • The execution of the Design of Experiment (DoE) was conducted by proxy, where graduate teaching assistants (GTAs) conducted the experiment and collected data for students

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Face to face teaching stopped, the way that most universities teach has been disrupted. Flipped and blended learning modes are well established as approaches to teaching, and Zoom, Google Meet, Webex and Microsoft Teams allow reasonably effective face to face teaching to take place in live lectures and tutorials. The development of Virtual Learning Environments (VLEs) such as Canvas, Blackboard and Moodle allow the provision of teaching material and assessment to take place. In engineering and the sciences there is the need for students to conduct practical work. Sometimes this requires specialist, large equipment or risky activities. This paper discusses and gives examples of various innovative ways of moving practical activities from face-to-face to virtual delivery

Methods
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call