Academic Musings & Tech for e-Learning

This weblog is my online journal for Instructional Technology ideas and NYIT course assignments. You may find my opinions on a variety of topics as well, and links to other subjects, primarily tech and education related, that I find interesting. Additional academic work, incuding lesson plans, articles and more can found by following the link to my home page.

U-Click, Corporate Sponsors Pay ... So CLICK away !

breast cancer site hunger site click to save a life click to protect children's health books for children preserve the rain forest http://home.earthlink.net/~l.bailey/animal rescue

Sunday, September 30, 2007

 

Engineering School has 40% Female Students!

I was just browsing through the NY Times online and came across this article about Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering. The school opened in 2002 and it teaches Engineering in a non-traditional way: they used Project Based Learning and an interdisciplinary approach to learning. The small, tuition-free college is attracting a lot of buzz and making a mark as a new "Ivy" league school. Under the direction of Lawrence W. Milas, the president of the foundation, college President Richard K. Miller created a school that seeks to educate a different breed of engineer - entreprenuerial, ethically minded and collaboratively trained in he humanities as well as technology- to think critically, and boldly. Miller, on his President's Message web page puts it this way, : "Olin will always be bold, innovative, flexible, and creative -- just like the students we have attracted. Our curriculum emphasizes an interdisciplinary approach, teamwork, hands-on design, business, creativity and communication."

The article also noted that 40% of its student are GIRLS, a high percentage for an engineering school. The Class of 2011 consists of 79 new students (34 women and 45 men). So yes, this is a very small school, but it has some very BIG ideas. Perhaps if more universities adopted such an approach, they would attract increasing numbers of engineering students, and a greater number of women to a male-dominated profession.

Re-engineering Engineering
The Hands-On Approach: Building a different breed of engineer at Olin College. 'In an era when software matters more than steel, Olin College wants to produce technologists with soul.'

By
JOHN SCHWARTZ
Published: September 30, 2007 NY Times Magazine Section

"WHEN NONENGINEERS THINK ABOUT ENGINEERING, it's usually because something has gone wrong: collapsing levees in New Orleans, the loss of the space shuttle Columbia in 2003. In the follow-up investigations, it comes out that some of the engineers involved knew something was wrong. But too few spoke up or pushed back - and those who did were ignored. This professional deficiency is something the new, tuition-free Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering wants to fix. At its tiny campus in Needham, Mass., outside Boston, Olin is trying to design a new kind of engineer."

Read the entire article at http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/30/magazine/30OLIN-t.html?ex=1348891200&en=6c28466b3eb78d2f&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Labels: education, engineering school, Olin College, project based learning, Richard K. Miller, undergraduate curriculum design


# posted by Lynne Bailey @ 1:57 PM
Comments: Post a Comment



<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Lynne, July 2006

Click here to return to home page

Links
Create New Post
Academic Portfolio
Studio Portfolio
PowerPoint Jeopardy Game for Teachers

Subscribe to Get Automatic UpdatesSubscribe to
Posts [Atom]

Click the Button to Get Automatic Updates

Add to Technorati Favorites

Be sure to get in touch so I know you're out there! Send Email

US Education News
Headlines provided by Moreover

Giveaway of the Day

textbooks

Blog Roll

Blog Flux Directory eLearning Blogs - 
Blog Catalog Blog Directory
archives
  • October 2006
  • November 2006
  • December 2006
  • February 2007
  • March 2007
  • April 2007
  • June 2007
  • September 2007
  • November 2007
  • January 2008
  • April 2008
  • June 2008
  • July 2008
  • May 2009
  • October 2009
  • January 2010