TY - GEN
T1 - Engineering Education, Moving into 2020s
T2 - 2020 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE 2020
AU - Qadir, Junaid
AU - Yau, Kok Lim Alvin
AU - Ali Imran, Muhammad
AU - Al-Fuqaha, Ala
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 IEEE.
PY - 2020/10/21
Y1 - 2020/10/21
N2 - As we move into the third decade of the 21st century, the 2020s, the unprecedented rate of technological disruption and the short-lived nature of the specifics of engineering state-of-the-art require us to carefully evaluate what it takes to be an effective engineer and what this entails for engineering education and their lifelong learning. While it is true that certain basics of engineering will not change, there will be an increased premium for some skills (such as lifelong learning, meta-learning, collaboration, creativity, critical thinking, communication skills, and cultural/global literacy). 21st-century skills are, as such, timeless skills: it is paradoxically the volatile nature of the modern world that has forced us from ephemeral vocational fads back to these permanently valuable skills. In this full research-to-practice paper, after reporting on the skills that policy think tanks and thought leaders deem necessary for the 21st century, we provide a synthesis in which we describe the pulls and pushes that learners and educators will face in the turbulent times of 2020 and beyond, and how they can thrive in the uncertain future through holistic well-rounded engineering education.
AB - As we move into the third decade of the 21st century, the 2020s, the unprecedented rate of technological disruption and the short-lived nature of the specifics of engineering state-of-the-art require us to carefully evaluate what it takes to be an effective engineer and what this entails for engineering education and their lifelong learning. While it is true that certain basics of engineering will not change, there will be an increased premium for some skills (such as lifelong learning, meta-learning, collaboration, creativity, critical thinking, communication skills, and cultural/global literacy). 21st-century skills are, as such, timeless skills: it is paradoxically the volatile nature of the modern world that has forced us from ephemeral vocational fads back to these permanently valuable skills. In this full research-to-practice paper, after reporting on the skills that policy think tanks and thought leaders deem necessary for the 21st century, we provide a synthesis in which we describe the pulls and pushes that learners and educators will face in the turbulent times of 2020 and beyond, and how they can thrive in the uncertain future through holistic well-rounded engineering education.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85098569715&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/FIE44824.2020.9274067
DO - 10.1109/FIE44824.2020.9274067
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85098569715
T3 - Proceedings - Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE
BT - 2020 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference, FIE 2020 - Proceedings
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Y2 - 21 October 2020 through 24 October 2020
ER -