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Abstract The several reports and papers of the past decade suggesting paradigm shifts in engineering education are shown to reveal a common theme, to wit: engineering is an integrative process and thus engineering education, particularly at the baccalaureate level, should be designed toward that end. Suggesting a change in intellectual culture, the roots of contemporary collegiate education in the United States are traced to their origin and attention is given to discussing the current emphasis on reductionism vis‐à‐vis integration or, said another way, a course‐focused education compared to a more holistic approach in which process and knowledge are woven throughout the curriculum. A new construct for systemic change in baccalaureate engineering education is suggested in terms of a taxonomy of intellectual components connected holistically with a core focus on developing human potential, as opposed to the present system in which students are passed serially through course filters.
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Joseph Bordogna
U.S. National Science Foundation
Eli Fromm
Drexel University
Edward W. Ernst
Journal of Engineering Education
University of Pennsylvania
University of South Carolina
Drexel University
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Bordogna et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10ea30ed67694fb09f9871 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/j.2168-9830.1993.tb00065.x