Scholarship
March 29, 2017
“The Scholarship of Teaching in Engineering”
- Author
- Felder, Richard M.
- Publisher
- Chemical Engineering Education 34, no. 2 (2000): 144
Engineering professors, like professors in every field, have always experimented with innovative
instructional methods, but traditionally little was done to link the innovations to learning theories or to
evaluate them beyond anecdotal reports of student satisfaction. More scholarly approaches have become
common in the past two decades as a consequence of several developments, including a change in the
engineering program accreditation system to one requiring learning outcomes assessment and continual
improvement, and the literature of the scholarship of teaching and learning in engineering has grown
rapidly. Most published studies have used surveys and quantitative research methods, approaches with
which engineers tend to be relatively comfortable, but studies that use some of the qualitative methods
characteristic of social science research have also begun to appear. The challenge to engineering
education is to make the scholarship of teaching and learning equal to the scholarships of discovery,
integration, and application in the faculty reward system.