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Presentation
Not just informative, but necessary: infusing green and sustainable topics into engineering and technology curricula
2008 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition (2008)
  • Kurt A. Rosentrater, United States Department of Agriculture
  • Elif Kongar, University of Bridgeport
Abstract

Generally accepted duties of engineers and technologists encompass designing and implementing solutions to problems. When so doing, it is their responsibility to be cognizant of the impacts of their designs on, and thus their accountability to, not only society in general, but also subsequent effects upon the environment. They need to be able to concurrently satisfy these competing needs, as well as constraints specific to the design challenges at hand. Responding to these requirements are the growing fields of green engineering and sustainable engineering. Both of these areas encompass many concepts, ideas, and tools, all of which are essential information for graduates to know and understand. Many degree programs do not offer this type of information to their students. It is true that modifying curricula can be challenging, especially as pressure mounts to teach the students more information, but not extend their tenure at the university.

Toward that end, the goal of this paper is to discuss three key topics that can be readily infused into existing coursework with minimal disruption: raw materials, process efficiencies, and wastes/byproducts. These three themes are essential to any engineering field or application, whether discussing design, manufacturing operations, management, service operations, or energy production, to name only a few. These concepts apply to traditional engineering materials and even to organic and biological processing, and they extend fully across the engineering spectrum, from product conception to end-of-life. Indeed, these three topics are multidisciplinary in nature.

In this paper we will discuss each of these topics in turn, and how to infuse each of them into engineering and technology coursework (there are a variety of ways to successfully incorporate them into existing curricula). We will also provide a resource base that educators can use when pursuing such an endeavor. Augmenting undergraduate and graduate instruction is a strategy that can reap profound rewards, not only because trained graduates will enter the workforce equipped with this knowledge, but bolstering curricula can raise awareness of these topics on many levels, ranging from the students themselves to the public at large.

Publication Date
June 23, 2008
Comments
Works produced by employees of the U.S. Government as part of their official duties are not copyrighted within the U.S. The content of this document is not copyrighted.
Citation Information
Kurt A. Rosentrater and Elif Kongar. "Not just informative, but necessary: infusing green and sustainable topics into engineering and technology curricula" 2008 ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition (2008)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/kurt_rosentrater/205/