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Improving Student Engagement in Engineering Using Brain-Based Learning Principles as Instructional Delivery Protocols.

Authors :
Solomon, John T.
Viswanathan, Vimal Kumar
Hamilton, Eric
Nayak, Chitra R.
Source :
Proceedings of the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition; 2017, preceding p1-10, 11p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

This paper presents a plausible solution using brain based learning principles as instructional delivery protocols to address the issue of lack of academic engagement among the upper level engineering students. The study was conducted at Tuskegee University, an HBCU and can be implemented universally in other institutes due to its foundation on brain based learning principles. Although student engagement issues inside engineering classrooms have several components, we focus our attention in this paper mainly on two issues: the dis-engagement arising due to the lack of understanding of pre-requisites and insufficient mathematical skills of students reaching junior and senior engineering classes. A previous pilot study confirmed that a large fraction of students who reach junior and senior level classes require repeated review of pre-requisite concepts and need assistance in reviewing their basic and essential mathematical skills before they can successfully engage in their classes. To address these issues, an instructional delivery framework titled "Tailored Instructions and Engineered Delivery Using PROTOCOLs" (TIED-UP) has been designed and explored, where mandatory brain-based learning procedures were used along with a media rich online delivery strategy. This paper summarizes the efforts currently undertaken to develop this framework based on brain-based learning theories to address some of these issues. In this framework, each course concept is broken down to interconnected sub-concepts. Short conceptual videos that use a number of mandatory instructional protocols were developed for the instruction of each of these concept and sub-concept. The study shows that such an intervention has significantly increased students' academic success as measured by grades and caused a substantial decline in their failure rate, when compared against a control group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21535868
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Proceedings of the ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Publication Type :
Conference
Accession number :
125730683