Newsletter Sp r i n g 2 01 3
Engineering Service-Learning Project Receives National Recognition By Sherry Squires
sustainability, assessment of student learning and level of real world experience. FUSE stood out as exemplary in these areas, as well as demonstrating an ease of replication for other universities interested in implementing service-learning for engineering undergraduates.
Boise State University’s First Undergraduate Service Learning Experience (FUSE): Real-World Adaptive Engineering Design course is one of 29 exemplar programs throughout the United States to be featured in a new National Academy of Engineering publication, “Infusing Real World Experiences into Engineering Education.”
FUSE, a service-learning section of Introduction to Engineering (ENGR 120), was developed and managed by Boise State freshman engineering coordinator Carol Sevier. FUSE is a projectbased lab course that pairs first-year engineering students with community members with disabilities. The teams work together to modify or adapt technology to fit their needs. Students create design options, evaluate their designs and create prototypes of the most viable technology given the client’s need, the cost and the project schedule.
FUSE was chosen from a pool of 95 programs nominated by deans, chairs, or faculty, and assessed based on creativity, innovation, attention to diversity, anticipated vs. actual outcomes,
Students build relationships and work closely with community partners while meeting the objectives of the program: to discover the creativity, challenge and rewards in solving an engineering problem; to apply critical thinking and problemsolving skills using the engineering design process; to identify, analyze and solve a problem from the community; to practice the skills necessary to be a successful engineer including project management skills, working on a multidisciplinary team and communicating within a project team with instructors, clients, community partners and industry experts; to contribute to the community; and to better understand themselves, including their strengths and weaknesses, by reflection upon these experiences. More information about the FUSE program can be found on the FUSE website. http://coen.boisestate.edu/fuse/
Instructional and Performance Technology Gets New Name By Kathleen Tuck
After 25 years, the Instructional and Performance Technology (IPT) department in the College of Engineering is changing its name. Beginning in August 2013, the name of the department will be Organizational Performance and Workplace Learning (OPWL). At the same time, the name of the department’s certificate in Human Performance Technology (HPT) is changing to Workplace Performance Improvement (WPI).
These changes follow the recommendation from a 2011 external review to create a new department name that “embraces the present and future scope of the department and that is understandable to a wide audience of scholars and practitioners.” The new name better represents the department’s emphasis on learning in workplace settings and its focus on learning as one alternative for improving performance in organizations. It also better represents the kind of work that graduates do after completing their degree or certificate.
While the department name will be new, the department curriculum will be unchanged. Degree and certificate requirements will be the same, course
content and delivery will be the same, and the department’s commitment to high-quality online professional education will be the same.