Oct. 10, 2005
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Linda Vanasupa
Chair, Materials Engineering
(805) 756-1537
lvanasup@calpoly.edu
Cal Poly Receives $1 Million Grant to Redesign
Engineering Education
to Retain Women, Minorities
SAN LUIS OBISPO -- Cal Poly's Materials Engineering Department
has received a $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation
to redesign its materials engineering education program.
"The 're-engineering' of the Materials Engineering degree
curriculum is intended to attract and retain more women and minorities
while preparing all students to solve increasingly complex global
problems," according to Materials Engineering Department Chair
and Professor Linda Vanasupa.
The Materials Engineering Department and its Industrial Advisory
Board have been exploring new teaching methods and curriculum since
2002. Since then, the department has assembled a team of more than
25 professors and experts from various colleges and departments
at Cal Poly and other universities, agencies and companies across
the nation. The team reviewed education research findings and "best
practices" from university education programs around the country
before incorporating its findings into a plan for changing materials
engineering education at Cal Poly.
The cross-campus group named the coursework overhaul plan "TriAD:
Triple Bottom Line Awareness in Design."
"The proposed changes represent an urgency to create a more
diverse population of engineers that are more representative of
society as a whole and to instill in students a new way of thinking
about balancing economics, the environment, and society's needs
-- what we're calling the 'triple bottom line,'" said Professor
Vanasupa.
"One of our basic premises is that young people, especially
women and students from underrepresented groups, will be motivated
to study and apply their creative energies to benefit society if
they are aware of society's needs and know they can make a difference,"
she stressed.
The $1 million, 3-year grant from the NSF will pay for faculty
time to develop, implement and test the effectiveness of the new
curriculum and laboratory exercises. Although the Materials Engineering
faculty have piloted many of the course changes already, the grant
funding will enable professors to launch a cohesive, team-taught,
project-based learning approach for the students' junior year, Vanasupa
said.
"The college of engineering is greatly encouraged by this
exceptional level of support from NSF, given the strong national
competition for such awards. We anticipate many positive outcomes
from this project -- outcomes that will benefit not just Cal Poly,
but also other universities nationwide," said Unny Menon, associate
dean.
The proposed curricular revision will change roughly 80 percent
of the materials engineering courses at Cal Poly. Changes include:
- Linking students in peer groups for learning and support during
freshmen and sophomore years -- when students are most likely
to drop out of engineering
- Increasing interaction between students and faculty, with faculty
taking on more "coaching" roles with students
- Encouraging student appreciation for communications, math and
science skills and "deeper learning" in undergraduate
courses in those areas
- Providing more "real world" engineering applications
and learning experiences
- Including a "service learning" requirement for undergraduate
materials engineering students.
The redesigned materials engineering curriculum will also emphasize
ethical, environmental, health and safety, sustainability, social,
political and manufacturing issues.
As part of the change, some newly admitted materials engineering
students will complete pre-college, web-based tutorials before coming
to campus. The department will monitor whether the tutorials increase
student success.
The service learning component of the curriculum is key, Vanasupa
said, because it gives students a chance to see how their engineering
skills and problem-solving abilities can help people in need.
So far, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, National Instruments, Texas
Instruments and the Semiconductor Industry Association have contacted
the National Science Foundation to express interest in the service-learning
portion of the new curriculum.
For more details on the Materials Engineering Department or the
launch of its new curriculum, visit www.mate.calpoly.edu.
- # # # -
|