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A direct method for teaching and measuring engineering professional skills for global workplace competency: Adaptations to computing at a University in the United Arab Emirates
Proceedings of 2014 International Conference on Interactive Collaborative Learning, ICL 2014
  • Ashley Ater Kranov, Washington State University Pullman
  • Maurice Danaher, Zayed University
  • Kevin Schoepp, Zayed University
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
1-21-2014
Abstract

© 2014 IEEE. The Engineering Professional Skills Assessment (EPSA) is the first and only direct method and measurement tool in the literature that can be used to teach and simultaneously measure the ABET non-technical skills for use at both course and program levels. The American Society for Engineering Education award-winning EPSA is a discussion-based performance activity designed to elicit students' knowledge and application of engineering professional skills. A partnership with Zayed University in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) was formed in 2014 to adapt the EPSA to the field of computing, as well as to the UAE context. The final deliverable of the project will be the Computing Professional Skills Assessment, which will be made freely available to the computing and IT communities worldwide. This paper describes the initial stages of the project, the development of one scenario and two dimensions of the CPS Rubric.

ISBN
9781479944378
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Disciplines
Keywords
  • ABET,
  • assessment,
  • measure,
  • professional skills,
  • student outcomes
Scopus ID
84922932964
Indexed in Scopus
Yes
Open Access
No
https://doi.org/10.1109/ICL.2014.7017937
Citation Information
Ashley Ater Kranov, Maurice Danaher and Kevin Schoepp. "A direct method for teaching and measuring engineering professional skills for global workplace competency: Adaptations to computing at a University in the United Arab Emirates" Proceedings of 2014 International Conference on Interactive Collaborative Learning, ICL 2014 (2014) p. 29 - 36
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/maurice-danaher/11/