2021 Virtual Undergraduate Research Symposium

2021 Virtual Undergraduate Research Symposium

Making the Most of Virtual Community Engagement for International Projects during the Covid-19 Pandemic

Making the Most of Virtual Community Engagement for International Projects during the Covid-19 Pandemic

PROJECT NUMBER: 48 | AUTHOR: Angelina Rivera​, Civil and Environmental Engineering

MENTORS: Jessica Smith and Juan Lucena, Engineering, Design, and Society

 

ABSTRACT

The [blinded] is a multi-country, interinstitutional, and interdisciplinary global research collaboration whose goal is to co-design socially responsible and sustainable gold mining practices with communities, engineers, and social scientists. A key component of this work is engineering education research that investigates how situated learning enhances undergraduate students’ global sociotechnical competency, especially as it relates to their ability to define and solve problems with people from diverse disciplinary backgrounds and life experiences. Situated learning refers to how students learn under different a) configurations of social relations (e.g., graduate/undergraduate; expert/non-expert; US/non-US students, etc.); b) pedagogical strategies for engineering problem definition and solution (e.g., remote vs. in-person; in-class vs. in-field); and c) different geographical contexts (e.g., in the US vs. in Colombia) affect faculty and student learning. Global sociotechnical competency refers to having the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to define and solve engineering problems as socio-technical in different international settings. Knowledge is understanding how engineering problems are always socio-technical and shaped by the historical, cultural, economic, and physical dimensions of a place. Skills are learning to define and solve problems with perspectives different than their own. Attitudes are the desires to continue engaging other expert and non-expert perspectives, working abroad, and serving communities after graduation. In 2019 a diverse group of [blinded] engineering undergraduate students participated in a two-week field session in Colombia, where they visited mine sites and processing facilities, in addition to the partner university in Colombia. In 2020, however, the burgeoning COVID-19 pandemic made international fieldwork impossible. This paper will describe how we developed and executed a meaningful distance-based fieldwork experience that maintained direct engagement with international students and community members. We will offer a preliminary assessment of these methods’ efficacy for developing global sociotechnical competency through remote community engagement and learning. In particular, we will compare the situated learning of the 2019 (in the field) and the 2020 (virtual) student participants as they differently identified stakeholders for engineering projects and changed their understanding of mining as a sociotechnical process as a result of the summer session.

PRESENTATION

AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY

Angelina Rivera is a first-generation, third-year student at Colorado School of Mines majoring in Civil Engineering with an area of special interest in Humanitarian Engineering. Over her time at Mines, Angelina has completed multiple research projects on a variety of projects including extracting harmful metals from water, understanding the qualities of waste rock from the mines, and better understanding how students’ learning is impacted by a virtual platform. In the future, Angelina hopes to continue research in the Department of Engineering, Design, and Society because she desires to further understand the impact engineers have on society.

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