Singh Anita, Ferry Dawn, Mills Susan
Biomedical Engineering, School of Engineering, Widener University, Chester, PA 19013 e-mail: .
School of Nursing, Widener University, Chester, PA 19013.
J Biomech Eng. 2018 Aug 1;140(8):0810091-8. doi: 10.1115/1.4040359.
This study reports our experience of developing a series of biomedical engineering (BME) courses having active and experiential learning components in an interdisciplinary learning environment. In the first course, BME465: biomechanics, students were immersed in a simulation laboratory setting involving mannequins that are currently used for teaching in the School of Nursing. Each team identified possible technological challenges directly related to the biomechanics of the mannequin and presented an improvement overcoming the challenge. This approach of exposing engineering students to a problem in a clinical learning environment enhanced the adaptive and experiential learning capabilities of the course. In the following semester, through BME448: medical devices, engineering students were partnered with nursing students and exposed to simulation scenarios and real-world clinical settings. They were required to identify three unmet needs in the real-world clinical settings and propose a viable engineering solution. This approach helped BME students to understand and employ real-world applications of engineering principles in problem solving while being exposed to an interdisciplinary collaborative environment. A final step was for engineering students to execute their proposed solution from either BME465 or BME448 courses by undertaking it as their capstone senior design project (ENGR401-402). Overall, the inclusion of clinical immersions in interdisciplinary teams in a series of courses not only allowed the integration of active and experiential learning in continuity but also offered engineers more practice of their profession, adaptive expertise, and an understanding of roles and expertise of other professionals involved in enhancement of healthcare and patient safety.
本研究报告了我们在跨学科学习环境中开发一系列具有主动学习和体验式学习组件的生物医学工程(BME)课程的经验。在第一门课程BME465:生物力学中,学生们沉浸在一个模拟实验室环境中,该环境涉及目前护理学院教学中使用的人体模型。每个团队都确定了与人体模型生物力学直接相关的可能技术挑战,并提出了克服该挑战的改进方案。这种让工科学生接触临床学习环境中的问题的方法增强了课程的适应性和体验式学习能力。在下个学期,通过BME448:医疗设备课程,工科学生与护理专业学生结成小组,并接触模拟场景和真实临床环境。他们被要求识别真实临床环境中的三个未满足需求,并提出可行的工程解决方案。这种方法帮助生物医学工程专业的学生在接触跨学科协作环境的同时,理解并运用工程原理在解决问题中的实际应用。最后一步是让工科学生将他们在BME465或BME448课程中提出的解决方案作为他们的本科毕业设计项目(ENGR401 - 402)来实施。总体而言,在一系列课程中将临床沉浸式体验纳入跨学科团队,不仅能够持续整合主动学习和体验式学习,还为工程师提供了更多专业实践机会、培养了适应性专业技能,并让他们了解了参与改善医疗保健和患者安全的其他专业人员的角色和专业技能。