Abstract

The ability to communicate problem analysis and investigation is crucial to engineering students’ success. The Swales CARS model has generated considerable pedagogical interest because it describes how many engineers communicate in diverse documents. However, research has not yet reached any consensus about how effectively this model improves students’ ability to communicate problem analysis and investigation. In previous work, we reported that teaching the Swales CARS model and deploying an engineering case increased the students’ confidence to critique their own projects, but that study only focused on student impressions of their ability. To address this gap and expand on previous work, we evaluated students in a first-year engineering-communications course to determine whether teaching the Swales CARS model improved their ability to communicate problem analysis and investigation. Our results show our expanded approach generates considerable gains in these skills, which has far-reaching implications for the design of communications instruction in engineering programs.

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