In the era of market and work-force globalization engineers need a solid understanding of the impact their products have locally as well as globally. This is why the US Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology recently put a new spin on this requirement in engineering education. Specifically, outcome 3h of Engineering Criteria 2000 states that engineering graduates must have "the broad education to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global / societal context". This outcome may be one of the most difficult to achieve since it requires not only a strong technical understanding but also an informed societal and historical perspective that is particularly difficult to achieve. This paper identifies some of the skills students need to be able to evaluate the impact of their solutions in a global / societal context as well as methods used by some universities to address this issue outside of technical engineering courses. The main focus of this paper is the introduction of course design elements that help students master these skills that can be incorporated into required and elective engineering courses. Examples are presented from a variety of thermal/fluid courses where these skills are taught in the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department at San Jose State University.
[1]
N. A. Mello.
How one institution provides a global perspective for engineers
,
2001,
31st Annual Frontiers in Education Conference. Impact on Engineering and Science Education. Conference Proceedings (Cat. No.01CH37193).
[2]
Steven H. VanderLeest,et al.
Global Engineering And The Liberal Arts
,
1998
.
[3]
Brett Gunnink,et al.
Writing, critical thinking, and engineering curricula
,
2002,
32nd Annual Frontiers in Education.
[4]
Peter Weiss.
Oceans of electricity: New technologies convert the motion of waves into watts
,
2001
.
[5]
Rebecca Brent,et al.
Designing and Teaching Courses to Satisfy the ABET Engineering Criteria
,
2003
.
[6]
Charles M. Vest,et al.
Engineering Education for a Changing World
,
1992
.
[7]
Marshall Brain,et al.
How Stuff Works
,
2001
.