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What Is Global Engineering Education For? : The Making of International Educators, Part I & II, Paperback / softback Book

What Is Global Engineering Education For? : The Making of International Educators, Part I & II Paperback / softback

Part of the Synthesis Lectures on Global Engineering series

Paperback / softback

Description

Global engineering offers the seductive image of engineers figuring out how to optimize work through collaboration and mobility.

Its biggest challenge to engineers, however, is more fundamental and difficult: to better understand what they know and value qua engineers and why.

This volume reports an experimental effort to help sixteen engineering educators produce "personal geographies" describing what led them to make risky career commitments to international and global engineering education.

The contents of their diverse trajectories stand out in extending far beyond the narrower image of producing globally-competent engineers.

Their personal geographies repeatedly highlight experiences of incongruence beyond home countries that provoked them to see themselves and understand their knowledge differently.

The experiences were sufficiently profound to motivate them to design educational experiences that could challenge engineering students in similar ways. For nine engineers, gaining new international knowledge challenged assumptions that engineering work and life are limited to purely technical practices, compelling explicit attention to broader value commitments.

For five non-engineers and two hybrids, gaining new international knowledge fueled ambitions to help engineering students better recognize and critically examine the broader value commitments in their work. A background chapter examines the historical emergence of international engineering education in the United States, and an epilogue explores what it might take to integrate practices of critical self-analysis more systematically in the education and training of engineers.

Two appendices and two online supplements describe the unique research process that generated these personal geographies, especially the workshop at the U.S.

National Academy of Engineering in which authors were prohibited from participating in discussions of their manuscripts.

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