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Engineering judgement in undergraduate structural design education: enhancing learning with failure case studies

Vikki Edmondson, Fred Sherratt

2022European Journal of Engineering Education21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Universities face the challenge of developing undergraduate structural engineering students' design judgement. This study evaluates whether introducing ‘learning from failure', centralised around ‘real-world' case studies, serves to facilitate the development of engineering judgement in structural design. The study identifies the use of three characteristics of engineering judgement: diagnostic, inductive, and interpretive in the work of the first-year undergraduate structural design students. Thematic analysis, combined with a constant comparison method and the rigour of inter-researcher reliability, was used to develop coding and mapping to evaluate students' work. The majority of students correctly applied diagnostic engineering judgement to the definition of a problem for a failure case study; and displayed the inductive aspect of judgement. Students' interpretive understanding embraced multi-faceted considerations, with engineering practice, complexity in causality, and learning from history being dominant. Introducing case studies deepened students’ enquiry, stimulating the development of a more nuanced understanding of structural engineering judgement.

Topics & Concepts

JudgementEngineering educationMathematics educationHigher educationEngineeringEngineering ethicsEngineering managementPsychologyPedagogyPolitical scienceLawEngineering Education and Curriculum DevelopmentProblem and Project Based LearningDesign Education and Practice
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