Paper also published in Proceedings of the 17th Annual Conference of the Australasian Association for Engineering Education: Creativity, Challenge, Change; Partnerships in Engineering Education, pp. 428-437.Engineering education is undergoing continuous change. Drivers for this change come from a number of sources, such as the K-12 pipeline (eg. school curricula, student attitudes towards science and engineering), the profession (eg. accreditation requirements, increasing globalisation and multidisciplinarity, increased emphasis on sustainability), government (eg. increasing student to staff ratios), internationalisation (eg. greater student diversity, geographically distributed student cohorts) and students (eg. the need to cater for 'Net ...
The characteristics and learning styles, as well as the implications for faculty development of 'Net...
Purpose – In today’s complex society, there is an increasing demand to include a wider set of skills...
This paper explores the experiences of three academic members of the University of Nottingham Open O...
Increasingly, engineers are required to work as part of multidisciplinary teams, often in an interna...
American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE); Australasian Association for Engineering Educatio...
Over 140 geography and engineering students from across Australia and overseas spent 4 weeks partici...
Over 140 geography and engineering students from across Australia and overseas spent 4 weeks partici...
Developing in students a deep understanding of the concept of sustainability, and how it applies to ...
Role playing has been used as a teaching tool across various disciplines for a very long time1-4. Th...
although adaptive to student needs, suffers from the tyranny of distance. Students can feel isolated...
The Mekong e-Sim involved more than 140 students across Australia and overseas participating in an o...
In this paper we propose adapting role-play teaching methodology to engineering studies. The role of...
The characteristics and learning styles, as well as the implications for faculty development of Net ...
Mekong e-Sim was designed to create an authentic learning environment in which students from differe...
In this paper we propose adapting role-play teaching methodology to engineering studies. The role of...
The characteristics and learning styles, as well as the implications for faculty development of 'Net...
Purpose – In today’s complex society, there is an increasing demand to include a wider set of skills...
This paper explores the experiences of three academic members of the University of Nottingham Open O...
Increasingly, engineers are required to work as part of multidisciplinary teams, often in an interna...
American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE); Australasian Association for Engineering Educatio...
Over 140 geography and engineering students from across Australia and overseas spent 4 weeks partici...
Over 140 geography and engineering students from across Australia and overseas spent 4 weeks partici...
Developing in students a deep understanding of the concept of sustainability, and how it applies to ...
Role playing has been used as a teaching tool across various disciplines for a very long time1-4. Th...
although adaptive to student needs, suffers from the tyranny of distance. Students can feel isolated...
The Mekong e-Sim involved more than 140 students across Australia and overseas participating in an o...
In this paper we propose adapting role-play teaching methodology to engineering studies. The role of...
The characteristics and learning styles, as well as the implications for faculty development of Net ...
Mekong e-Sim was designed to create an authentic learning environment in which students from differe...
In this paper we propose adapting role-play teaching methodology to engineering studies. The role of...
The characteristics and learning styles, as well as the implications for faculty development of 'Net...
Purpose – In today’s complex society, there is an increasing demand to include a wider set of skills...
This paper explores the experiences of three academic members of the University of Nottingham Open O...