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Engineering Leaders World Congress on Engineering Education 2013
- تاريخ المؤتمر: 7-9 Jan 2013
- الموقع: Qatar National Convention Center, Doha, Qatar
- رقم المجلد: 2014
- المنشور: ٠١ يوليو ٢٠١٤
1 - 20 of 30 نتائج
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Applications of Matlab optimization capabilities in the design of N-continuous stirred tank bioreactors connected in series
المؤلفون: Ibrahim M. Abu-ReeshThe optimal design (variable volume) of continuous stirred tank reactors (CSTR's), in series, performing biological conversion of organic materials, was derived. The optimal design was based on the minimum overall reactor volume required for a certain degree of substrate conversion, and the number of reactors. In this study, it was assumed that cell growth kinetics follows the Contois model with endogenous decay. This unstructured kinetic model has been used by many researchers to describe biodegradation of organic materials, especially in the food industries and industrial wastewater treatment. The optimization problem was formulated as a nonlinear constrained mathematical programming problem, and solved using the Matlab function “fmincon”. The effect of operating parameters such as; substrate concentration in the feed to the first reactor, substrate conversion, and number of CSTR's in series for the optimum design was investigated. Using the optimum design is beneficial only at high substrate conversion. The substrate concentration in the feed to the first reactor has little effect on the total required reactor volume. Up to 5 CSTRs in series were used in this study.
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Problem-Based Learning (PBL): How to implement, strategize, and infuse PBL in an engineering program?
المؤلفون: Waddah AkiliThis paper focuses on the implementation of problem–based learning (PBL) in an engineering program, and argues that implementation of problem-based learning needs to be placed in a context and must be developed with careful consideration of the social, economic, and ethnic diversity of the student population and the university academic culture and prevailing norms. The paper includes a brief history, selected PBL models, strategies to infuse PBL in an engineering program, and suggestions for redesigning classes and courses to catalyze change in the classroom environment through students' engagement. The paper also addresses the potential difficulties that could arise during implementation of PBL, particularly when instructors are new to this instructional method.
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The current state of industry-academia relations in the Arab Gulf states: Problems and potential solutions
المؤلفون: Waddah AkiliThis paper focuses on the current state of industry-academia relationships in the Arab Gulf states (Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates), and argues that meaningful, long-lasting relations have begun to develop. But, there is much more that can and must be done. There is a need for increased “relevancy” of engineering education, with greater industry-academia collaboration on many fronts. It was inspired by a round table discussion, where engineering graduates of region's colleges have suggested ways to start developing viable and enduring connections between local industries and academic institutions. Strategies to help promote the collaboration effort are outlined. In particular, activities (plans, and scenarios) perceived as effective in closing the gap between academia and industries are described. Training, capstone courses, consulting by faculty and joint research projects, aimed at serving the interest of both parties (academia and the industrial partners) are also addressed. The paper sheds light on: the mission, the nature, and relevant benchmarks of this collaborative effort. Slanting curricula and programs toward industrial relevance and “practice”, will help equip graduates with the “tools of the trade”, thus lessening the burden on industry, in having to spend time and effort preparing and training employees at the start of their career. To this end, the author draws on his own experience as a faculty member in the Arab Gulf states; in addition to views and suggestions of colleagues, students, graduates, and business leaders in the Region.
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ICT in engineering educational content delivery: Challenges and opportunities
المؤلفون: Edriss Ahmed AliDespite the attractive features of ICT in education, and the many advantages that successful use of these technological resources can offer to the education sector in general, their use in engineering educational content delivery is still lagging behind other educational disciplines. In this paper we look closely at the challenges that face full utilization of these technology resources in engineering educational content delivery, the great opportunities that ICT can offer, and actions that can be taken to overcome the challenges. The challenges are exemplified in: the quantitative nature of engineering discipline, lack of awareness of pedagogical use of ICT in education and the lack of clear policy of how and what type of engineering educational content delivery mode can benefit most from available ICT resources. Opportunities available for full utilization of ICT facilities are summarized in: the wide availability of computing resources, high speed internet access and general ICT knowhow among the young generations of both students and instructors among others. Actions to be taken for proper utilization of ICT resources in engineering education are given, and Blended Mode of learning, which combines face-to-face with online learning, is suggested as the most suitable mode for engineering educational content delivery.
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Fourteen grand challenges and skills for engineers in 2020
المؤلفون: Adedeji B. BadiruThe fourteen grand challenges of engineering, compiled by the US National Academy of Engineering (NAE) in 2008, have implications for the future of engineering education and practice. Engineers in 2020 will need diverse skills to tackle the multitude of issues and factors involved in adequately and successfully addressing the challenges. Extract from the NAE document on the 14 grand challenges reads – “In sum, governmental and institutional, political and economic, and personal and social barriers will repeatedly arise to impede the pursuit of solutions to problems. As they have throughout history, engineers will have to integrate their methods and solutions with the goals and desires of all society's members”. This statement emphasizes the relevance of a holistic systems thinking approach in solving the multi-faceted global problems that we face now and will face in the future. This presentation will discuss the critical skills that engineers must have in the 2020 timeframe in order to contribute to devising sustainable solutions to our global problems, problems that affect everyone in every corner of the world. Project management skills will be the cornerstone for integrating the multiple skills across geographical boundaries as well as across cultural divides. This presentation will demonstrate how project management skills, tools, and techniques can be brought to bear on solving 2020 engineering challenges. Using a socio-technical systems framework, this presentation will Illustrate the application of project management to bring about new products, services, and results efficiently within cost and schedule constraints to address the 14 grand challenges. With the recommendations of this presentation, positive outcomes of multinational projects can be achieved so that we can improve the global quality of life. Engineering educators must come together to develop robust curricula to adequately prepare students for the challenges that lie ahead. This World Congress is a good starting point.
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Succeeding as an engineering professional
المؤلفون: Walter W. BuchananGraduating student outcomes are presented, comparing ABET's expectations for Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) baccalaureate graduates and Engineering Technology Accreditation Commission (ETAC) baccalaureate graduates. ABET is a good place to start for the outcomes that engineering and engineering technology students must achieve to be workplace-ready. The Student Outcomes (General Criteria 3) that follow are pretty comprehensive and similar, which is the purpose of this submission.
Engineering and Engineering Technology Comparisons:
- 1. Engineering 3(a) to Engineering Technology 3B(b.) Outcomes
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- (a) an ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering
- b. an ability to select and apply a knowledge of mathematics, science, engineering, and technology to engineering technology problems that require the application of principles and applied procedures or methodologies
- 2. Engineering 3(b) to Engineering Technology 3B(c.) Outcomes
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- (b) an ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data
- c. an ability to conduct standard tests and measurements; to conduct, analyze, and interpret experiments; and to apply experimental results to improve processes
- 3. Engineering 3(c) to Engineering Technology 3B(d.) Outcomes
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- (c) an ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability
- d. an ability to design systems, components, or processes for broadly-defined engineering technology problems appropriate to program educational objectives
- 4. Engineering 3(d) to Engineering Technology 3B(e.) Outcomes
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- (d) an ability to function on multidisciplinary teams
- e. an ability to function effectively as a member or leader on a technical team
- 5. Engineering 3(e) to Engineering Technology 3B(f.) Outcomes
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- (e) an ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems
- f. an ability to identify, analyze, and solve broadly-defined engineering technology problems
- 6. Engineering 3(f) to Engineering Technology 3B(i.) Outcomes
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- (f) an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility
- i. an understanding of and a commitment to address professional and ethical responsibilities including a respect for diversity
- 7. Engineering 3(g) to Engineering Technology 3B(g.) Outcomes
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- (g) an ability to communicate effectively
- g. an ability to apply written, oral, and graphical communication in both technical and non-technical environments; and an ability to identify and use appropriate technical literature
- 8. Engineering 3(h) to Engineering Technology 3B(j.) Outcomes
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- (h) the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context
- j. a knowledge of the impact of engineering technology solutions in a societal and global context
- 9. Engineering 3(i) to Engineering Technology 3B(h.) Outcomes
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- (i) a recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning
- h. an understanding of the need for and an ability to engage in self-directed continuing professional development
- 10. Engineering 3(k) to Engineering Technology 3B(a.) Outcomes
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- (k) an ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice
- a. an ability to select and apply the knowledge, techniques, skills, and modern tools of the discipline to broadly-defined engineering technology activities
- 11. Engineering 3(j) to Engineering Technology 3B(k.) Outcomes
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- These don't closely align:
- (j) a knowledge of contemporary issues
- k. a commitment to quality, timeliness, and continuous improvement
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Development of a remote experiment under a unified remote laboratory framework
المؤلفون: Xuemin Chen, Daniel Osakue, Ning Wang, Hamid Parsaei and Gangbing SongIn this paper, a Smart Vibration Platform (SVP) remote experiment under a novel unified framework for implementing remote laboratory is presented. In this unified remote laboratory framework, a Comet solution via Node.js and its Socket.IO package was implemented on the server side. A new web socket protocol, which lets the experiment to communicate with Socket.IO, was created for the workstation. With this unified framework, the user can remotely conduct the experiment by using any portable device without installing any plug-in.
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International study programs: The role of internships, R&D projects, and their evaluation
المؤلفون: Helmut Dispert, Christine Boudin, Joseph A. Morgan and Mark McMahonGlobalization has lead to a fundamental change of the paradigms covering our systems of higher education. The so-called Bologna process has initiated fundamental reforms, not only in the content and duration of university study programs, but also in the way application-oriented education is viewed and implemented worldwide – and especially in the European Higher Education Area (EHEA). This paper outlines new approaches to allow students to get international and professional experience and project-oriented know-how. A detailed discussion and comparison will be given, including the following educational programs: ISPS – International Study and Project Semester, EPS – European Project Semester, MUTW – Multinational Undergraduate Team Work, and Praxis – the Thematic Network dedicated to project/internship-based teaching and learning. Also presented will be the support system ACE – Academic Clearing-House for Excellence. Although theses programs are open to all types of study areas, currently the emphasis is on the engineering sciences, computer science & engineering, and information technology. All these programs are built around the central idea that state of the art university level education should be a mix of theory-based study programs and industry-oriented practical phases. The final part of this paper will cover the areas of accreditation and evaluation.
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On teaching non-technical skills for the engineers of 2020
المؤلفون: Nihad Dukhan and Nassif RayessThe paper presents how a U.S. university was able to implement curricular content in a specially designed engineering course to teach students critical non-technical skills of the engineers of 2020, as described by educational, industrial and governmental organizations. The course targeted issues that directly affect the engineering profession, i.e., nature of the knowledge-based economy, the nature and need for innovation, the various kinds and advantages of entrepreneurship and business models associated with it, public speaking and communication skills, working in teams, and the need for life-long learning. The course also included content targeting the ability for an engineer to manage his/herself with a corporate setting in today's knowledge-based economy. This paper describes the course design, content and rubric that were used to assess some of the course outcomes, as well as the results of the assessment. In general, the results show that the vast majority of students agreed that the course had been effective in teaching and making them aware of.
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Adaptable web modules to stimulate active learning in engineering hydrology using data and model simulations
المؤلفون: Emad Habib, Madeleine Bodin, Ehab Meselhe, David Tarboton, Upmanu Lall and David BaronThe overall goal of this study is to contribute to the advancement of hydrologic education as a multi-faceted discipline. The specific objectives are to deliver visual, case-based, data and simulation driven learning experiences to instructors and students through open source web technologies and community based data and modeling sources. The approach is to use three different regional-scale natural hydrologic systems as educational “observatories” and have the learning experiences embedded within. These hydro-systems (Coastal Louisiana, Florida Everglades, and Utah Great Salt Lake Basin) provide a wealth of hydrologic concepts and scenarios that can be used in many curricula. Several student-centered learning modules are currently under development along with an instructional interface to guide and support the learner and the instructor. The developments also include an instructor's guide containing adaptation and implementation procedures. The web-based modules are intended to be applicable in a wide range of courses, in different programs within institutions, as well as at different levels within the same program. Independent users will test the system to obtain feedback for necessary revisions and enhance the adaptability of the project.
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A system-of-systems engineering approach to leadership and innovation: Sustainable STEM education and workforce development through the Smart Cities initiative
المؤلفون: Waldemar Karwowski, Tareq Ahram and Ben AmabaGiven the most competitive nature of a global business environment today, an effective engineering management and leadership that supports innovation and entrepreneurship is a critical requirement for all levels of an organization. In view of the ever increasing complexity of contemporary urban systems and services they provide, it is important for planners and leaders to leverage individual and organizational learning processes to assure the highest levels of organizational performance. Development of engineering competence and leadership skills are also extremely important due to a general shortage of engineering talent and the need for mobility of highly trained professionals. Two factors emerge to have the greatest impact on growth and sustainability of the future smart cities and the variety of services they will be able to provide to their citizens: improving managerial, leadership and creative (innovative) skills of city employees, and integrating the concepts of the science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines into the instructional training and development of the future smart city workforce. One of the most important factors for success of the above goal is integration of the complex adaptive systems engineering concepts into the smart city planning processes. This paper introduces a complex adaptive system-of-systems engineering approach to leadership and innovation by promoting sustainable STEM education and workforce development through the smart cities initiative. The core STEM leadership and innovation principles are integrated with systems engineering concepts for collaborative development of engineering skills and performance improvements in education, this is critical for modeling and design of the next generation sustainable smarter cities and services.
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Enabling engineering students to become successful innovators and entrepreneurs
المؤلفون: Vassilios C. KelessidisEngineering students are educated to become problem solvers. We teach them the art of analysis and synthesis. During their time at the university they acquire abilities for analyzing problems by breaking them down into smaller problems, they identify and implement solutions and then synthesize them. In most countries this is not enough if they want to become successful entrepreneurs and innovators. Higher engineering education, however, should be the ideal environment for nesting highly advanced technological and scientific entrepreneurship. Little success has been reported of engineer entrepreneurs coming right after school, mainly because of relatively low motivation amongst students and teachers but also due to social, cultural and legal barriers.
In today's world, enterprise sustainability and employability are uncertain, thus the task of successfully creating a new enterprise requires the best knowledge, application of good practices and the mastery of the most advanced methodologies in enterprise management and development. It becomes essential to develop abilities and skills and to deliver tools, adequate to the necessities of these entrepreneurs. Better prepared engineering graduates with appropriate training are more eager to start their own business, which can spur economic development. Training, however, should be more than teaching courses; hands on prototype development and support via simulation has proved effective in exposing students to the entrepreneurial world and in enhancing skills and knowledge.
In this paper we present tools we have developed and practices we have implemented to motivate our engineering students to become innovators, to develop their ideas and to establish their own businesses. The first tool is the Nursery of Ideas, which enables students who have an innovative idea to proceed, under guidance from mentors to utilize laboratory equipment of the University, and to build a prototype, which can prove or disprove their idea. Formal support is given to the student in terms of monetary assistance for building their prototype and with mentoring through the whole process. The second tool is the utilization of a virtual environment, which integrates four training platforms that altogether aim toward providing entrepreneurship training based on business simulation.
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The Acantelys project: Development of a model of e-university “open and free” for the formation of Latin American researchers and professionals in computing, telecommunications and technology management
المؤلفون: Juan Martinez, Karina Aviles, Jesús Abello, Magaly Figueroa and Jose MolinaThis paper tries to give a simple answer for a complex question: why we do not “publish” in scientist congress? In this paper, we present the project of e-university “Acantelys” (www.acantelys.org, with more than 250 Latin-American students online), and we describe the practical methodology (with 8 critical phases), used successfully in eight world congresses and twenty international conferences of computer Engineering, telecommunications and IT management. Here, we show too a description of why the need for access to programs of high-tech training to low-income students from Latin America and how to get it; describes the minimum objectives and the management model should meet Institutions established for this purpose, outlines the methodological structure and educational tools currently used by Acantelys cooperative association, as a practical solution for these projects, and finally we sharing the results obtained so far and the goals future of this organization.
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Global and India-centric perspectives of engineering education and accreditation
المؤلفون: R NatarajanAbstractEngineering education has been recognized globally as the vehicle for national development and global competitiveness. It needs, however, a major re-think in the “ flattening ” world: It is often quoted: “We are currently preparing students for jobs that don't yet exist, using technologies that haven't yet been invented, in order to solve problems we don't even know are problems yet”.
The distinctive characteristics of the 21st century include: Change –in magnitude as well as velocity and acceleration; depletion of natural resources, both of energy and materials; environmental degradation – of air, water and soil; demand for mass education; significant impact of technology on: society, commerce, lifestyle, education and entertainment; widening disparities in society – digital divide, technology divide, prosperity divide, education divide; social tensions; globalization.
There are significant changes in the practice of engineering as a profession in the 21st century: constraints imposed by environmental considerations; customization demanded by diverse customers; opportunities offered by technology developments in several sectors; availability of sophisticated diagnostic and computational tools; wide choice of materials; implications of globalization, such as innovation as the basis of competitiveness.
The different stakeholders in the engineering system have differing requirements and expectations: employers demand immediate application of knowledge and skills acquired and productivity; students require both immediate employment and long-term employability; parents desire prosperous careers for their wards; and the teachers expect effective learning by students.
Some of the contemporary issues in engineering education include the (generation) gap between: those who teach and those who learn; those who recruit and those who seek jobs; those who frame policies and those who function within the system; and theory and practice of assessment of learning, and of performance on the job. How do we close these gaps?
There are significant reasons for redesigning the engineering education systems in both developed and developing countries: The inputs, output requirements, the environment and ambience, have all changed considerably over the years, and new models of learning have emerged. Innovation and commercialization of university R&D are gaining in importance.
The Indian engineering education system is characterized by: huge size; many asymmetries and divides; diversity (of many types); variable quality; frequent changes of policy; much international collaboration; many strengths and weaknesses; many opportunities and challenges. Several strategies are being put in place to address the different priority areas. Four of the major challenges are: increasing capacity; improving quality; internationalizing engineering education and R&D.
Some of the current tensions include: science vs. engineering as a study option; core engineering vs. IT as job option; private sector vs. public sector careers; generalist vs. specialized institutions/universities; teaching-intensive vs. research-led institutions; capacity expansion vs. quality assurance.
India aims to progress from being a provisional member of the Washington Accord to a full-fledged member, and has accordingly been redesigning its accreditation systems and processes to be Washington Accord compliant. Country-wide awareness and training workshops are being organized. It is intended to bring in legislation to integrate the different accreditation systems in the country, such as technical education, higher education, medical education, and legal education.
Accreditation is a driving force for change in our engineering education systems and processes. It provides a direction to the institution and its faculty, students, and leadership. The mandatory peer review mechanism enables an outside-in view of the institution; an opportunity for review and reflection of the activities and performance, and enables a prioritization of activities. Periodic accreditation prevents complacency and creates an Institution “on the move”. Accreditation processes serve as both change agents as well as catalysts in engineering education, in particular, for promoting quality in all academic systems and processes.
The recent annual publication of World University Rankings by Shanghai University's Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU), Times Higher Education (THE) and Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) is having a profound impact on the policies and practices of universities worldwide. Ellen Hazelkorn, in her recent book Rankings and the Reshaping of Higher Education: The Battle for World-Class Excellence, 2011, points out that:
- – “Rankings are arguably having a more profound impact on higher education and the construction of knowledge.”
- – “HEIs are responding to league tables and rankings (LTRS), which are having an impact or influence — positive or perverse — on institutional behavior, decision-making and actions”.
- – “Rankings demonstrate the new environment of higher education, and act as a driver of change”.
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Grand Challenges of 21st-century engineering education
المؤلفون: Haluk OgmenOur educational system needs to adapt to ever-changing scientific, industrial, economic, and social systems. However, since changes in the educational system have long-term repercussions, one has to apply care in preserving the relative stability of existing educational structures so that changes are adapted towards only those trends that have enduring and significant impact on society. At the turn of the 21st century, the U.S. National Academy of Engineering identified 14 engineering grand challenges for the 21st century. We discuss how undergraduate education can be shaped to address these grand challenges.
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Envisioning the future of a university through environment scanning
المؤلفون: Tasneem Pervez, Taher Ba-Omar, Kamla Al-Busaidi and Cengiz ErcilLong-term thinking is a difficult task that must be undertaken to challenge ourselves to imagine future research, educational and developmental needs. It is difficult but extremely important to imagine the environment for university students and faculty yet to be born, and to think outside the constraints of next year's syllabus or next week's committee meeting. This approach provides us the freedom to think beyond the burdens of problems and challenges knocking the door.
Scanning the future environment, studying the characteristics of the leading comprehensive universities, gathering the opinion of stakeholders and the experience of peers will help to develop and adopt for unpredicted future. This paper focuses on scanning the environment, which the university and its inhabitants will face in the decades to come. Seven environmental scan factors have been identified and summarized based on the imaginative thoughts of futurists gathered through reports, magazine articles, journal papers and web-based materials.
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Compartmentalization and contextual issues: The neglected aspects of engineering education
المؤلفون: Tasneem Pervez and Ali S. Al-HarthyThe existing engineering programs in the Gulf region, to some extent, over emphasize or underemphasize the two important aspects namely compartmentalization and contextual issues. Both topics are important, intertwined and need to be adequately and properly addressed by the engineering educators to produce globally competent engineers. There is a growing need for engineers who recognize the complexities of global and societal issues and respond to those complex issues with the solutions they develop. This paper presents authors' thought to explain the compartmentalization and contextual issues in regional engineering curriculum and its delivery and how it can be improved to attain global competitiveness.
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Perceptions of engineering students on industrial training in Malaysia
المؤلفون: Fatin Aliah Phang, Khairiyah Mohd Yusof, Maisarah Mat Saat and Norazah Mohd YusofIndustrial training or internship is an important part of a study program for an engineering student in all universities in Malaysia. This research explores the students' perception of their experience in industrial training, which includes the management of the industrial training at the universities, self-change, future career development and readiness to be an engineer. A questionnaire was given to 88 third-year engineering undergraduates from one public university and one private university, who had just undergone industrial training. The data was analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. The results show that the engineering students had moderate levels of perception on all the categories, except future career, which showed a low level of perception. This meant that they believed that industrial training had not given them the confidence that they will be able to obtain the future career they want in engineering. Another interesting finding of the research, through a correlational analysis (p < .05), shows that the longer the duration of industrial training, the higher the readiness and future career development among the engineering undergraduates. This may indicate that there is a need to lengthen the duration of industrial training during the study where the popular duration currently in most of the public universities is 10-12 weeks.
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