Ludwig Patrice M, Nagel Jacquelyn K, Lewis Erica J
1Department of Biology, James Madison University, 951 Carrier Dr. MSC 7801, Harrisonburg, VA 22807 USA.
2Department of Engineering, James Madison University, 801 Carrier Drive MSC 4113, Harrisonburg, VA 22807 USA.
Int J STEM Educ. 2017;4(1):33. doi: 10.1186/s40594-017-0095-y. Epub 2017 Nov 27.
Preparing today's undergraduate students from science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) and related health professions to solve wide-sweeping healthcare challenges is critical. Moreover, it is imperative that educators help students develop the capabilities needed to meet those challenges, including problem solving, collaboration, and an ability to work with rapidly evolving technologies. We piloted a multidisciplinary education (ME) course aimed at filling this gap, and subsequently assessed whether or not students identified achieving the course objectives. In the course, undergraduate students from engineering, pre-nursing (students not yet admitted to the nursing program), and pre-professional health (e.g., pre-med and pre-physician's assistant) were grouped based on their diversity of background, major, and StrengthsFinder® proficiencies in a MakerSpace to create tangible solutions to health-related problems facing the community. We then used qualitative content analysis to assess the research question: what is the impact of undergraduate multidisciplinary education offered in a MakerSpace on student attitudes towards and perceptions of skills required in their own as well as others occupations?
We discovered these students were able to identify and learn capabilities that will be critical in their future work. For example, students appreciated the challenging problems they encountered and the ability to meet demands using cutting-edge technologies including 3D printers. Moreover, they learned the value of working in a multidisciplinary group. We expected some of these findings, such as an increased ability to work in teams. However, some themes were unexpected, including students explicitly appreciating the method of teaching that focused on experiential student learning through faculty mentoring.
These findings can be used to guide additional research. Moreover, offering a variety of these courses is a necessary step to prepare students for the current and future workforce. Finally, these classes should include a focus on intentional team creation with the goal of allowing students to solve challenging real-world problems through ethical reasoning and collaboration.
培养当今科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)以及相关健康专业的本科生,以应对广泛的医疗保健挑战至关重要。此外,教育工作者必须帮助学生培养应对这些挑战所需的能力,包括解决问题、协作以及使用快速发展的技术的能力。我们试点了一门多学科教育(ME)课程,旨在填补这一空白,随后评估学生是否认同实现了课程目标。在该课程中,来自工程专业、预护理专业(尚未被护理专业录取的学生)和预专业健康专业(如医学预科和医师助理预科)的本科生,根据他们背景、专业的多样性以及在创客空间中的优势识别器®能力水平进行分组,以创造切实可行的解决方案,解决社区面临的与健康相关的问题。然后,我们使用定性内容分析来评估研究问题:在创客空间中提供的本科多学科教育对学生对自身及其他职业所需技能的态度和认知有何影响?
我们发现这些学生能够识别并学习对他们未来工作至关重要的能力。例如,学生们欣赏他们遇到的具有挑战性的问题,以及使用包括3D打印机在内的前沿技术满足需求的能力。此外,他们还了解了在多学科团队中工作的价值。我们预期会有一些这样的发现,比如团队合作能力的提高。然而,一些主题是出乎意料的,包括学生明确赞赏通过教师指导专注于体验式学生学习的教学方法。
这些发现可用于指导进一步的研究。此外,提供各种此类课程是让学生为当前和未来劳动力市场做好准备的必要步骤。最后,这些课程应注重有意组建团队,目标是让学生通过道德推理和协作解决具有挑战性的现实世界问题。