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Article
Design of a Professional Practice Simulator for Educating and Motivating First-Year Engineering Students
Advances in Engineering Education
  • Naomi C. Chesler, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Golnaz Arastoopour Irgens, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Cynthia M. D'Angelo, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Elizabeth A. Bagley, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • David Williamson Shaffer, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2013
Publisher
American Society for Engineering Education
Disciplines
Abstract

Increasingly, first-year engineering curricula incorporate design projects. However, the faculty and staff effort and physical resources required for the number of students enrolled can be daunting and affect the quality of instruction. To reduce these costs, ensure a high quality educational experience, and reduce variability in student outcomes that occur with individual design projects, we developed a simulation of engineering professional practice, NephroTex, in which teams of students are guided through multiple design-build-test cycles by a mentor in a virtual internship. Here we report on the design process for the virtual internship and results of testing with first-year engineering students at a large, public university. Our results demonstrate that the novel virtual internship successfully educated and motivated first-year-engineering students. Importantly, the virtual environment captures rich discourse that can be used to assess the process of student learning with tools from existing learning theory.

Citation Information
Naomi C. Chesler, Golnaz Arastoopour Irgens, Cynthia M. D'Angelo, Elizabeth A. Bagley, et al.. "Design of a Professional Practice Simulator for Educating and Motivating First-Year Engineering Students" Advances in Engineering Education (2013)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/golnaz-arastoopourirgens/2/