Effects of Industrial Experience and Coursework During Sophomore and Junior Years on Student Learning of Engineering Design

Author:

Bailey Reid1

Affiliation:

1. University of Virginia, P.O. Box 400747, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4747

Abstract

While prior work indicates that seniors near the end of their capstone design course know more about design than first-year students, it is unclear where this knowledge is gained. We study two possible sources of seniors’ greater design knowledge: coursework during sophomore and junior years and industrial experience. The design process knowledge of seniors at the beginning of their capstone class was assessed and information about their industrial experience obtained. These data were compared to assessment data of first-year students at the end of an introduction to engineering design course. The results indicate that industrial experience greatly increases students’ recognition that documentation needs to occur throughout the design process. Seniors with industrial experience, however, are less aware that idea generation is an important part of design and are less able to allot time to different design activities than first-year students at the end of a hands-on introduction to engineering design course. For the remaining four aspects of design process knowledge assessed—namely, identifying the requirements for a project at the project’s outset, making decisions with a systematic process based on analysis, building and testing prototypes and final designs, and the overall layout of design including iteration—no differences are found between seniors with industrial experience and first-year students at the end of an introduction to engineering design course. One explanation for why industrial experience does not impact student’s design process knowledge positively in more areas than documentation is that students on internships only experience a small portion of a design process. Due to this “snapshot” experience, either (1) students are not able to learn a significant amount about the bigger picture design concepts or (2) students each learn about different aspects of design but, as a population, do not show any significant increase in design process knowledge. The one activity that all interns will experience is the necessity to document their work. Furthermore, seniors without industrial experience scored no differently than first-year students on any single aspect of design process knowledge measured. This indicates that analysis-heavy sophomore and junior classes do not impact design process knowledge.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design,Computer Science Applications,Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials

Reference7 articles.

1. Assessing Engineering Design Process Knowledge;Bailey;International Journal of Engineering Education

2. A Comparison Study of the Academic Progress of the Cooperative and the Four-Year Students;Lindenmeyer;Journal of Cooperative Education

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4. The Impact of Cooperative Education on Academic Performance and Compensation of Engineering Majors;Blair;J. Eng. Educ.

5. The Effects of Cooperative Education on Job Search Time, Quality of Job Placement and Advancement;Wessels;Journal of Cooperative Education

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