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Title of the item:

New Literacies for Engineering Students: Critical Reflective-Writing Practice

Title:
New Literacies for Engineering Students: Critical Reflective-Writing Practice
Authors:
Badenhorst, Cecile M.
Moloney, Cecilia
Rosales, Janna
Descriptors:
Engineering Education
Multiple Literacies
Critical Thinking
Reflection
Writing (Composition)
21st Century Skills
Competency Based Education
Graduate Students
Professional Identity
Institutes (Training Programs)
Social Justice
Empathy
Leadership Training
Ethics
Diversity
Foreign Students
Foreign Countries
Language:
English
Source:
Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning. Jun 2020 11(1).
Availability:
University of Western Ontario and Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education. Mills Memorial Library Room 504, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4L6, Canada. Tel: 905-525-9140; e-mail: ; Web site: http://www.cjsotl-rcacea.ca/
Peer Reviewed:
Y
Page Count:
22
Publication Date:
2020
Document Type:
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Education Level:
Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
ISSN:
1918-2902
Abstractor:
As Provided
Entry Date:
2020
Accession Number:
EJ1262591
Academic Journal
Engineering education has long resulted in professional engineers with the required technical skills to meet the profession's needs. Yet in today's rapidly changing, globalised world, engineers will need more than technical competencies to meet the requirements of their professional work. Incorporating different literacies in engineering education might help with this shift. We introduce the idea of including critical reflective writing practice on the idea of being an engineer into engineering curricula. Our study explored how fourteen engineering graduate students were mentored on how to reflect critically on their professional identities through narrative writing. The students wrote the narratives while attending a pilot co-curricular Institute that focused on developing leadership, communication, and professional skill-building. We analysed the narrative writing produced by participants using the constant comparison method of analysis. Key findings show that: (1) narrative methodologies are valuable for tapping into the reflective non-technical, process aspects of the profession; and (2) critical reflective writing practice was challenging for participants and required comprehensive scaffolding. If scaffolded and embedded in engineering curricula, critical reflective writing practice could contribute significantly to a 21st century engineering identity.

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