scholarly journals Developing An Engineering Technology Curriculum: A Case Study At Western Carolina University

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Ford ◽  
Robert Anderson
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Phillips ◽  
William Sullivan ◽  
Robert Aron ◽  
Abour Cherif ◽  
Susana Fortun

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald Matusiak ◽  
David Andruczyk ◽  
D. Steven Barker ◽  
Stephanie Goldberg ◽  
Ilya Grinberg

Author(s):  
Naomi Rose Boyer ◽  
Mori Toosi ◽  
Eric A. Roe ◽  
Kathy Bucklew ◽  
Orathai Northern

This case study describes an open entry early exit (O3E) rolling enrollment program focused on untangling the web of systems, assumptions, roles, relationships, and interagency processes to address the national emphasis on affordable, compressed, and flexible degree attainment, particularly in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) talent gap areas. To this end, Polk State College has empowered students with an affordable, accessible option that was initiated as a result of a National Science Foundation-Advanced Technological Education (NSF-ATE) project award. The project was designed to transition a traditional engineering technology associate in science degree program to a hybrid competency-based (CBE), modular, non-term, self-paced, learner-centered, faculty-mentored format. As a work in progress, having shifted to CBE in Fall 2014, the O3E program team has undertaken and resolved numerous challenges, many of which are still emergent, and identified significant breakthroughs to provide a catalyst to the reconceptualization of higher education.


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