Example of a printed circuit board containing electronic
chips.
Text extret de la entrevista a Luis Gallego, director de
producció de
Clickair, realitzada en la revista
Informacions UPC, N. 219, pag. 16, maig 2009
"We have grown up in a climate of competition
between people, teams, departments, divisions, pupils, schools,
universities. We have been taught by economists that competition
will solve our problems. Actually, competition, we see now, is
destructive. It would be better if everyone would work together
as a system, with the aim for everybody to win. What we need is
cooperation and transformation to a new style of management.
Competition leads to loss. People pulling in opposite directions
on a rope only exhaust themselves: they go nowhere.
What we need is cooperation. Every
example of cooperation is one of benefit and gains to them that
cooperate"(*)
(*) Source:
http://www.ce.umn.edu/~smith/docs/Smith-Pedagogies_of_Engagement.pdf
Please, forget the old paradigm
...
"The
ubiquitous lecture is the bane of true learning",
especially in observation-based, hands-on fields such as
engineering. The lecture-dominated system encourages a
passive learning environment, a highly compartmentalized
(lecture-sized) curriculum, and worst of all, instils
neither the motivation nor the skills for life-long
learning. Beyond that, engineering education should move
away from the current dominance of classroom based pedagogy
to more active learning approaches that engage
problem-solving skills and team building".
(
bane: a thing that ruins or
spoils)
Source: James J. Duderstadt, "Engineering
for a Changing World", 2008,
University of Michigan Engineering, page 33.
This is an outstanding and sensational report which makes
you reflect about everything in teaching and learning ..., so, for sure, do not expect
us to lecture you in our course in the traditional way! but,
be prepared for something different and more effective!
And, if you still don't believe what's going on here, please,
read this short interview to prof.
Roger Schank, pedagogue: “Els professors universitaris són uns
ganduls”,
El Debat,
February 3rd, 2010 (
pdf).
Here you are
another interview to Roger Schank
Another interesting reference: "
Education
ambivalence", Editorial from
Nature.com, Nature, Volume: 465, Pages: 525–526, Published
online 02 June 2010,
"But
there is strong evidence that talking at students isn't nearly
as effective as engaging them with cooperative, hands-on
learning activities"
"But
by showering so many rewards on research instead of on teaching,
universities and funding agencies risk undermining the
educational quality that is required for research to flourish in
the long term"
Lazaro, José, "Clases
a la Boloñesa", EL PAIS, September 2, 2010,
La implantación este curso del 'modelo Bolonia' abre la
posibilidad de acabar con las "clases magistrales". Sin embargo,
aún hay profesores y alumnos que defienden este método medieval,
anterior a la imprenta
-
Transforming American Education: Learning Powered by Technology,
National Educational Technology Plan 2010, Office of Educational
Technology, U.S. Department of Education, March 5, 2010,
DRAFT,
To stimulate motivational engagement, technology can
develop a positive image as a life-long learner.
Technology can inspire imagination and intellectual curiosity
that help people engage actively as learners and open new
channels for success or visions of career possibilities. For
example, when students use the tools of professionals to engage
in real-world problems, they can begin to see themselves in
productive professional roles (“I am a graphic artist,” “I am a
scientist,” “I am a teacher”). Technology also provides
opportunities for students to express themselves by engaging in
online communities and sharing content they have created with
the world.
- Here you are an excellent report from
million+, a
UK university think-tank :
Teaching that Matters. Teaching that Matters
highlights how a teaching revolution is underway in modern
universities with new approaches to teaching increasing
employability and improving the social mobility of graduates.
- Read also this related article from The Guardian:
British universities are in need of a teaching revolution.
- Here you are once again the idea of changing the paradigm, in
this case from the report "Great
Expectations",
CIHE, UK.
“Keep open to new ways of working and different learning styles
and attitudes. It’s not just about having engineering technical
expertise but also having invaluable general skills.”
- Científicos de frontera -
Andrea Goldsmith (rtve.es)
Entrevista a la investigadora Andrea
Goldsmith, catedrática de la Universidad de Stanford (EEUU) y
miembro del Instituto de Ingenieros Eléctricos y Electrónicos.
En la entrevista hablará sobre su pasión por un campo
vanguardista tradicionalmente masculino: la ingeniería
electrónica.
Goldsmith es considerada una autoridad
mundial en tecnologías móviles y sus múltiples aplicaciones. Sus
estudios han servido para avanzar en campos como las
comunicaciones inalámbricas (redes 'WIFI'), o la medicina, con
dispositivos que se colocan en el cuerpo y alarman a los médicos
cuando surgen problemas de salud.
-Craig, K. C.,
Take
engineering education in context.
EDN
Europe, 06/2011, (pdf)
Engineers practice engineering in context, so why do
educators teach it out of context?