A ranking comparison of the traditional, online and mixed laboratory mode learning objectives in engineering: Uncovering different priorities
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Published:2023
Issue:4
Volume:3
Page:331-349
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ISSN:2767-1925
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Container-title:STEM Education
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language:
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Short-container-title:steme
Author:
Nikolic Sasha1, Grundy Sarah2, Haque Rezwanul3, Lal Sulakshana4, Hassan Ghulam M.5, Daniel Scott6, Belkina Marina7, Lyden Sarah8, Suesse Thomas F.1
Affiliation:
1. University of Wollongong 2. University of New South Wales 3. University of the Sunshine Coast 4. Curtin University 5. University of Western Australia 6. University of Technology Sydney 7. Western Sydney University 8. University of Tasmania
Abstract
<abstract>
<p>The laboratory, an integral component of engineering education, can be conducted via traditional, online or mixed modes. Within these modes is a diverse range of implementation formats, each with different strengths and weaknesses. Empirical evidence investigating laboratory learning is rather scattered, with objectives measurement focused on the innovation in question (e.g., new simulation or experiment). Recently, a clearer picture of the most important laboratory learning objectives has formed. Missing is an understanding of whether academics implementing laboratories across different modes think about learning objectives differently. Using a survey based on the Laboratory Learning Objectives Measurement instrument, academics from a diverse range of engineering disciplines from across the world undertook a ranking exercise. The findings show that those implementing traditional and mixed laboratories align closely in their ranking choices, while those implementing online-only laboratories think about the objectives slightly differently. These findings provide an opportunity for reflection, enabling engineering educators to refine the alignment of their teaching modes, implementations and assessments with their intended learning objectives.</p>
</abstract>
Publisher
American Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS)
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