亚洲AV

George Mason KEEN on new teaching mindsets

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Engineering Unleashed

is a site where KEEN members share knowledge, creating 鈥渃ards鈥 where they publish projects and ideas. The following cards from George Mason faculty are on the site.聽

Entrepreneurially Minded Learning in a New Civil Engineering Elective Course: Part I 鈥 Boom!, by Girum Urgessa

Campus Navigator Project for freshmen students, by Humaira Akhtari

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亚洲AV鈥檚 (CEC) is making the most of its membership in (Kern Entrepreneurial Engineering Network), a nationwide network of 66 institutions, which it joined in December 2023.

, professor of civil engineering in the , and Director of Student Leadership and Success, is the school鈥檚 KEEN lead. His first step as a KEEN evangelist was meeting with all nine departments. 鈥淲e discussed the benefits for our faculty, our student body, and our college,鈥 he said.

Faculty take part in a hands-on building activity
Urgessa (right) at an Engineering Unleashed faculty development workshop. Photo provided.

KEEN鈥檚 goal is 鈥渋nstilling the entrepreneurial mindset in 100 percent of undergraduate engineering and computing students,鈥 specifically focusing on a learning framework called the 鈥3 C鈥檚鈥: curiosity, connections, and creating value. When instilling KEEN elements into instruction, faculty don鈥檛 need to develop new courses but rather rethink their teaching approach.

鈥淔aculty can be intentional about fostering curiosity, making connections, and getting students to integrate information from different sources in meaningful ways,鈥 said Urgessa. 鈥淎nd whether through a classroom exercise or a co-curricular activity, we need engineering and computing students to think about creating personal or societal value in a larger context.鈥

Several CEC faculty attended three of KEEN鈥檚 2024 summer workshops, fully paid for by the Kern Family Foundation, which launched KEEN. Urgessa calls these workshops a 鈥済old standard,鈥 helping faculty enhance teaching skills and elevate activities beyond the classroom, such as undergraduate research and student club engagement.

The KEEN Entrepreneurial Minded Learning Framework
The KEEN Entrepreneurially Minded Learning Framework. Photo courtesy KEEN.

鈥淭he most common feedback I get from faculty is, 鈥楬ow can I incorporate and measure mindset learning?鈥欌 said Urgessa. 聽鈥淎 great thing about KEEN is that there are already approved learning outcomes for this. One of my favorite outcomes is to 鈥榩ersist through and learn from failure.鈥 So when teaching, I can incorporate a problem where students fail several times before arriving at聽a final solution or design, but I intentionally allow time for them to learn from these repeated failures and reflect.鈥

To ensure full KEEN integration, CEC established the inaugural Mason KEEN Faculty Learning Community, a group of eight faculty from several departments who have attended KEEN workshops or conferences and meet monthly to share classroom implementation experiences.

By joining KEEN, CEC faculty are supporting students who are prepared to enter the workforce and are ready to make positive contributions in a rapidly changing world.