TY - GEN
T1 - AN ONGOING SPATIAL INTERVENTION PROJECT IN IRISH SECONDARY SCHOOLS FOR IMPROVED ENGINEERING EDUCATION
AU - Benedičič, U.
AU - Duffy, G.
AU - Sorby, S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 SEFI 2022 - 50th Annual Conference of the European Society for Engineering Education, Proceedings. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Spatial skills have been shown to strongly predict STEM attainment and can therefore be a determining factor in choosing to pursue high-paying engineering careers. This strong reliance on them particularly limits students with low spatial skills - a group over-represented by girls and students of low socioeconomic status. It has also been demonstrated that spatial training leads to meaningful improvements in skill development. In Ireland, as in most countries, spatial thinking is not explicitly taught at the pre-college level, even though it could influence students' eventual career paths. Currently, only a person's previous experiences outside the classroom influence skill development. In order to increase the number of students who select engineering and other STEM occupations as a career path, an explicit emphasis on training spatial thinking is likely to be very beneficial in pre-college education. An established spatial intervention course was selected for delivery to secondary schools in Ireland. Through training and ongoing support, teachers' spatial skills, and pedagogical content knowledge for spatial thinking are being developed to be shared with their students, leading to an increase in students' spatial skill level and future employment opportunities.
AB - Spatial skills have been shown to strongly predict STEM attainment and can therefore be a determining factor in choosing to pursue high-paying engineering careers. This strong reliance on them particularly limits students with low spatial skills - a group over-represented by girls and students of low socioeconomic status. It has also been demonstrated that spatial training leads to meaningful improvements in skill development. In Ireland, as in most countries, spatial thinking is not explicitly taught at the pre-college level, even though it could influence students' eventual career paths. Currently, only a person's previous experiences outside the classroom influence skill development. In order to increase the number of students who select engineering and other STEM occupations as a career path, an explicit emphasis on training spatial thinking is likely to be very beneficial in pre-college education. An established spatial intervention course was selected for delivery to secondary schools in Ireland. Through training and ongoing support, teachers' spatial skills, and pedagogical content knowledge for spatial thinking are being developed to be shared with their students, leading to an increase in students' spatial skill level and future employment opportunities.
KW - Engineering Education
KW - Post-Primary Education
KW - Professional Development Program
KW - Spatial Intervention
KW - Spatial Skills
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85147535423
U2 - 10.5821/conference-9788412322262.1321
DO - 10.5821/conference-9788412322262.1321
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85147535423
T3 - SEFI 2022 - 50th Annual Conference of the European Society for Engineering Education, Proceedings
SP - 943
EP - 951
BT - SEFI 2022 - 50th Annual Conference of the European Society for Engineering Education, Proceedings
A2 - Jarvinen, Hannu-Matti
A2 - Silvestre, Santiago
A2 - Llorens, Ariadna
A2 - Nagy, Balazs Vince
PB - European Society for Engineering Education (SEFI)
T2 - 50th Annual Conference of the European Society for Engineering Education, SEFI 2022
Y2 - 19 September 2022 through 22 September 2022
ER -