The Impact of an Introductory Biomedical Engineering Course on Students' Perceptions of the Engineering Profession

After their first year roughly 50% of engineering students do not continue in that major. One cause could be that students have little idea as to what the profession of engineeringis about. Freshman introductory courses provide a first approach to the engineering profession. Therefore, understanding t...

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Autores:
Quiroga Torres, Daniel Alejandro
Florez Luna, Nestor
Rodríguez Dueñas, William Ricardo
Rios Rincon, Adriana
Cruz, Antonio Miguel
Tipo de recurso:
Article of investigation
Fecha de publicación:
2016
Institución:
Escuela Colombiana de Ingeniería Julio Garavito
Repositorio:
Repositorio Institucional ECI
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:repositorio.escuelaing.edu.co:001/1582
Acceso en línea:
https://repositorio.escuelaing.edu.co/handle/001/1582
Palabra clave:
Educación Superior -Universidades
Ingeniería Biomédica
Biomedical engineering
Engineering pedagogy
Escuela Colombiana de Ingeniería Julio Garavito - Estudiantes
Pedagogía de la ingeniería
Educación
Ingeniería
Education
Engineering
Rights
closedAccess
License
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_14cb
Description
Summary:After their first year roughly 50% of engineering students do not continue in that major. One cause could be that students have little idea as to what the profession of engineeringis about. Freshman introductory courses provide a first approach to the engineering profession. Therefore, understanding the role of introductory engineering courses to increasing student knowledge of the profession is a relevant issue. The purpose of the study is to describe how student perceptions of the engineering profession overall change as a result of their educational experience in an introductory biomedical engineering course.This is a pre-post-test with no control group study design.One class(n =41)on a first-year biomedical engineering course participated in a hybrid Project-based-learning (PBL)-lecture learning strategy. A survey composed of a demographic and 5-point Likert (‘‘1’’ is strongly disagree and ‘‘5’’ is strongly agree) sections measured students’ perceptions of the engineering profession and was administered (paper-based) to all the students enrolled on this course. The students’ perceptions of the engineering profession were pooled into 3 main groups of skills, i.e. Technical skills, Professional skills, and Project management skills. Wilcoxon signed-rank test statistics were conducted to analyze the research question. Our analysis showed statistically significant results (pre-survey mean and SD: 4.01, 0.07; and post-survey mean and SD: 4.21, 0.05, p < 0.003), indicating the students’ overall perceptions of the engineering profession had significantly improved by the end of the course. The results indicated that the students’ overall perceptions of the engineering profession had significantly improved by the end of the introductory course.