Technical Papers
Dec 5, 2013

Global Interests among First-Year Civil and Environmental Engineering Students

Publication: Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice
Volume 140, Issue 2

Abstract

Student attitudes about the importance of global issues, their interest in global issues, and their interest in working abroad were evaluated using surveys and content analysis of homework assignments from first year civil and environmental engineering students from 2008 to 2011. Civil engineering students ranked globalization as having the lowest importance among 20 ABET and Body of Knowledge skills; environmental engineers ranked its importance significantly higher at fifteenth. International projects were popular among civil engineering students on two course assignments. Final reflective essays revealed that 20% of the civil engineering and 37% of the environmental engineering students, respectively, were interested in working abroad. In a 2011 survey, all civil engineering students indicated at least some level of interest in working on engineering projects outside the U.S. during their careers, either using distance collaboration or via other assignments abroad. Global work interests were higher among female than male students. The results indicate that many American civil engineering students were interested in working abroad and developing global skills.

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Go to Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice
Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering Education and Practice
Volume 140Issue 2April 2014

History

Received: Feb 5, 2013
Accepted: Oct 22, 2013
Published online: Dec 5, 2013
Published in print: Apr 1, 2014
Discussion open until: May 5, 2014

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Authors

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Angela R. Bielefeldt [email protected]
P.E.
M.ASCE
Professor, Dept. of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, Univ. of Colorado Boulder, 428 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0428. E-mail: [email protected]

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