Title: Problembased Interdisciplinary Education for Sustainable Development
1Problem-based Interdisciplinary Education for
Sustainable Development
Sustainable Development for Engineers and
Scientists MSEC30052
2Contents
- Introduction
- Facilitation
- 2006 Exercises
- 2006 Evaluation
31. Introduction
4Sustainable Development For Engineers and
Scientists
- Learning that is
- Inter-disciplinary
- Enquiry-based
- Student-centred
5New Undergraduate Elective
- Optional 10 credit course unit (delivered over 12
weeks) - Offered to third years in four disciplines in
2006/7 - Mech Eng, Civil Eng, Earth Science, Elec Eng
- 48 places awarded by competitive application
process (6 teams) - Offered to students from seven disciplines in
2007/8 - Mech Eng, Civil Eng, Earth Science, Elec Eng,
Maths, Physics, Chemistry - Up to 96 places awarded by competitive
application process (12 teams) - Problem Based Learning Format
- Education through completing a series of
challenges (tasks based on topical case studies) - Small mixed teams working independently
- Facilitator dedicated to each group
- Post Doctoral Research Associates trained as
Facilitators
6What is Problem Based Learning?
- No lectures! No handouts on facts or theory! No
direct teaching! - Students given series of challenges to pursue
wicked problems to develop their own learning - Student teams choose how/what to do to in
response to trigger proactivity and
independence needed - Develops professional skills and professional
approach in students - Formative feedback provided throughout learning
process
7The Difference with PBL
- Traditional teaching
- Im the expert - listen to what I tell you and
follow my instructions - Absorb my knowledge learn these facts and
principles - This is the right or wrong answer / approach.
- Problem Based Learning
- What do YOU think you need to know in order to
tackle this? - I dont know the solution you have to find
that out for yourselves - There is no single right or wrong answer you
must justify your reasoning/approach
8Why is a PBL, interactive, interdisciplinary
approach suited to learning about Sustainable
Development?
- Multi-disciplinary subject
- Interdisciplinary co-operation needed to tackle
sustainability problems - Fast pace of change makes skills vitally
important (rather than just knowledge) - Professional effectiveness key to driving change
9Format of PBL Sessions (2007)(Following first
exercise, which is spread over 3 weeks)
Week A
Week B
Hand in deliverable from last task (and submit
electronically)
Receive and discuss Academic feedback on last
task
Class Sessions (Weds 9-11 am)
Team Process Review - Discussion on last task
Verbal presentation by two students common
question
Facilitated Group Discussion on set topic
All students feed back results of individual
research
Trigger/Briefing on New Task
Discuss, debate and reach consensus on proposals
Analysis/Discussion of Task/Problem
Plan writing of the report or other
deliverable(s)
Choose individual questions AND a common
question to research
Individual Research Follow-up meetings/emails
Follow-up meetings/emails Produce
Report/Deliverable
Outside timetabled sessions
102. Facilitation
11Facilitation - Summary
- Post-Doctoral Research Associates selected to be
Facilitators from applicants from across the
Faculty - Knowledge of sustainable development not a
requirement to become a Facilitator - Several short training sessions on facilitating
groups provided in preparation - A one to two hour meeting is held straight after
each teaching session for support and guidance - In 2006/7, six Facilitators were dedicated to a
particular team of students, two others acted as
understudies and general helpers more will be
needed for 2007/8
12Key Facilitator Roles
- Facilitate group process / teamworking
- Facilitate problem-based learning
- Act as a resource broker
- Advise students on relevance and adequacy of
learning - Facilitate development of generic competencies
- Administration be familiar with exercises,
provide material to students at appropriate time - Professionalism attend consistently and ensure
group sessions start and run as timetabled
13Facilitator Induction Plan
- Introduction to the course-unit
- Introduction to Problem Based Learning
- Introduction to Facilitating
- Introduction to issues of groupworking
- Practice Facilitation
- Details of schedule and pedagogic reasons for
teaching format - Selection of final team
142006 Facilitator Selection
- Facilitators required to be
- Good listeners
- Good communicators (particularly verbally)
- Encouraging to students (positive!)
- Sensitive to students concerns
- Confident
- Able to resist temptation to direct the group
- Open to new ideas
152006 Facilitation in Practice
- Briefing / information pack provided for each
exercise, plus a detailed schedule for each 2
hour session - Two hour meeting/discussion held after every
session to review the process - Facilitators played key role in assessment as
well as in facilitating their groups - Students bonded strongly with each other and with
their Facilitators during the course unit - As students progressed during the course-unit,
less need for Facilitators to intervene - Very positive feedback from students about the
benefits of a dedicated facilitator viewed as
key to the learning experience
162006 Facilitator Team
173. 2006 Exercises
18Case Study Exercise Development
- Mechanisms for Driving/Implementing Change
- Predicting Consequences of Change
- Barriers to Change (Social, Env, Tech,
Financial) - Corporate change (within large organisations)
- Change across national and cultural boundaries
- Change via new legislation
- Change driven by technical innovation
- Change driven by investor pressure
- Verbal written Communication
- Collaborative team working
- Interdisciplinary Working
- Researching
- Handling large quantities of information (and
misinformation) - Filtering and analysing data
- Handling uncertainty and incomplete information
- Problem Solving
- Decision Making
- Justifying and Defending Recommendations
- Balancing environmental, social and economic
consequences - Considering impacts of change on
different stakeholders - Corporate Social Responsibility
- Life Cycle Approach
- Benchmarking / Assessing sustainability
- Cost/Benefit Analysis
- Team of industry consultants
- Environment Agency Team
- Overseas Aid Organisation
- Safety, Health and Environment (SHE) Dept of a
large organisation
- Not simply showcasing successful technical
solutions to sustainability or environmental
problems - Not simply designing technical solutions to a
problem without considering the wider economic
(commercial) and social barriers to
implementation
19Five Exercises Chosen
- WHEELS
- Change within a company
- Developed by Mrs Helen Dobson (Chemical Engineer)
- SHELTER
- Change across national and cultural boundaries
- Developed by Prof Grahame MacDougall (Architect)
- RULES
- Change driven by legislation
- Developed with Dr Carolyn Abbot (School of Law)
- ENERGY
- Change driven by technical innovation
- Developed with Dr Tony Sung (Mechanical Engineer)
- SHOPS
- Change driven by investor pressure (CSR / risk /
benchmarking) - Developed with Mr John Butlin (economics and CSR
specialist)
20Summary of Case Study Exercises
214. Project Evaluation
- Monitoring and Evaluation based on staff and
student feedback
22Evaluation (1)
- University Standard Questionnaire
- Very positive results compared with typical
course units - 100 students agree or mostly agree that
- Skills developed will be valuable
- Exercises were helpful for learning topics
- 96 students agree or mostly agree that
- Material studied was intellectually stimulating
- Teaching and support staff were readily
approachable - Teaching staff were helpful and willing to answer
questions
23Evaluation (2)
- Student Questionnaires
- (i) Readiness for inter-professional learning,
(ii) Learning styles, (iii) Self-perception - Scores for inter-professional learningand for a
deep approach to learning rose but not
statistically significant. - Self-perception scores improved
- Nominal Group process review
- Half way through unit (facilitators students)
and at end of unit (facilitators students)
24Nominal Group Process Results Key points from
students
- Positive Feedback
- Inter-disciplinary
- Teamwork (working in groups, independent
learning) - Mode of assessment
- Content (relevant, real-life, real-time
problems) - Negative Feedback
- Timetable (9am start!)
- Workload (quantity and variability)
- Volume of work not summatively assessed
- Timing of assessments
25Nominal Group Process Results Key points from
staff
- Positive Feedback
- Imaginative, varied tasks Problem based
learning Communication skills group
learning Multidisciplinary participants
Encouraging team work Teaching experience for
research staff - Negative Feedback
- - Lack of different disciplines- Unclear role
for assistant facilitators- Lack of specialist
knowledge- Moving goalposts
26Changes for 2007/8
- 96 places for students drawn from seven
disciplines. - Fourteen PDRA facilitators to be employed for the
next cohort . - Development of 2-3 new case study exercises.
- Use of rooms in Renolds Building as well as CEEBL
suite (C24 Sackville St Building). - Summative Assessment to change from written exam
to individual student personal reflective report. - Blackboard and Googledocs to be used by students
outside class sessions for accessing course
literature and producing collaborative reports.
27Thank you
- Mrs Helen Dobson
- The University of Manchester
- Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences
- Teaching Support and Development
- Email helen.dobson_at_manchester.ac.uk
28Additional Notes
29Course Unit Development Team
- Project Team
- Rosemary Tomkinson, Helen Dobson, Charles Engel,
Adele Aubrey, Bland Tomkinson, Charlotte Woods,
Martin Snelling, Tim Jones - Project Steering Group (Led by Pat Bailey)
- Pat Bailey, Peter Hicks, Simon Steiner, Richard
Dodds, Charles Engel, Bland Tomkinson, Paul
Sharratt, Colin Hughes, Rosemary Tomkinson, Helen
Dobson, Tim Jones
30University Questionnaire Results
A Agree, B Mostly Agree, C Neither Agree nor
Disagree, D Disagree, E N/A