糖心Vlog

DigitalEdHybrid learning and the future of STEM education

Hybrid learning and the future of STEM education

Educators are finding innovative ways of recreating the lab experience remotely and designing skills-based curricula that prepare students for the workplace

STEM education will inevitably be transformed by digital modes of teaching, but finding the right balance between online and in-person teaching formats presents a unique set of challenges. How universities can design a curriculum that offers the flexibility of digital and experiential laboratory-based learning will be key.

At a webinar hosted by 糖心Vlog in partnership with DigitalEd, an international panel of university leaders discussed both the issues they faced when delivering STEM鈥檚 digital transformation and the opportunities that it presented.

鈥淒igitalEd and the M枚bius platform really allow educators to provide practice opportunities for students鈥 algorithmic questions so that they can practise until they feel comfortable, until they feel they have a level of mastery of a particular process that they are working on,鈥 explained Louise Krmpotic,听vice-president of enterprise services at DigitalEd.

The panel鈥檚 experiences echoed those of many educators across campus: the pandemic had brought their digital transformations forward. With a lot of innovation being introduced on-the-fly, this has been a time of discovery in which faculty members learn which teaching modalities work best for their subjects.

鈥淭here are opportunities that we have exploited whereby you are able to facilitate the development of those skills much more effectively online than you can face to face,鈥 said Guy Daly,听deputy vice-chancellor (education and students) at Coventry University. 鈥淸Teaching] can be more personalised. You can get feedback in terms of the individual and whether or not the learning is effective or not 鈥 informally or formally.鈥

While there was no one approach that worked, with a mathematics programme requiring a very different set of teaching processes from those used in electrical engineering, translating effective pedagogies to digital platforms was more than simply a case of moving lectures online and holding tutorials over Zoom. With the right approach, however, universities can create learning experiences that have the potential to be more rewarding for the student than traditional lab work. 鈥淎ny time you go into one of these engineering fields, there is the laboratory experience which is a critical part of the student experience,鈥 said David Rumsey,听associate dean of engineering and computer sciences at Indiana Institute of Technology. 鈥淏eing shown how to use the equipment is different to actually using the equipment itself. For the electrical engineering technology programme, what we were able to do was put together a small electronics kit that included all the basic components that you would need, so that every student at home has their own little circuits lab. In some cases, they are getting more hands-on experience with the equipment than they would face-to-face because they have to do everything: they don鈥檛 have a lab partner.鈥

Technology is also creating the opportunity to enrich the learning experience with high-quality simulated environments, enabling students to revisit areas of their course that they find difficult.

鈥淏eing able to include things like interactives and simulations, enabling students to get some of that exploration online that they used to do only in person, will benefit not just the students who are [solely] online but everyone,鈥 said Krmpotic, 鈥渂ecause now students have the opportunity to go back and try it again, and to review concepts that they may have forgotten about or just need a refresher on.鈥

Nikita Hari,听lecturer at the Dyson Institute of Engineering and Technology, said that innovation in assessment was key because it defined the teaching and learning culture for students, with open-design collaborative projects helping students develop the 鈥渉abits of mind鈥 of an engineer. 鈥淚t enables the students to do more thinking, more writing and reflecting, interacting with their peers to improve their engagement and learning,鈥 she explained. 鈥淪tudents take more responsibility for their learning journey.鈥

听about听DigitalEd and higher education.

The panel

Alistair Lawrence,听special projects editor, 糖心Vlog (chair)
Guy Daly,听deputy vice-chancellor (education and students), Coventry University
Nikita Hari,听lecturer, Dyson Institute of Engineering and Technology
Louise Krmpotic,听vice-president (enterprise services), DigitalEd
Augusto Z Macalalag,听associate professor and programme director, School of Education, Arcadia University
David Rumsey,听associate dean of engineering and computer sciences and professor of electrical and computer engineering and mathematics, Indiana Institute of Technology

Brought to you by