Using a Museum Exhibit as a Pedagogical Tool for Developing Reflective Engineers.

Roman Taraban, Danny Reible, David Mesple, Francesco Donato, Ibrahim Yeter, Ryan Campbell, Jeong-Hee Kim, Jill Hoffman

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

Paper and Poster (Board # 157): Engineering educators are currently interested in the use of informal learning settings for developing reflective skills in engineers. The present study examined the effects of exposing engineering and non-engineering undergraduates to an exhibit at a university museum that focused on recycling. One goal was to test whether exposure to creative uses of recycled materials in everyday contexts made participants more sensitive to variables associated with reflective thinking in those contexts, like their sense of the utility of the recycled materials, the societal value of the recycled materials, and an appreciation for the process of recycling. A second goal was to test whether participants’ interpretation of the exhibit depended on how the experimenter framed recycling issues prior to participants’ interactions with the exhibit. The two forms of framing that were applied were a Government-Economy frame and a Community-Environment frame. The results of th
Original languageEnglish
StatePublished - Jun 2017

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