Developing Highly Effective Industry Partnerships: Co-op to Capstone Courses

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Transcription:

Developing Highly Effective Industry Partnerships: Co-op to Capstone Courses Chris Plouff Assistant Director Assistant Professor & Sebastian Chair School of Engineering

Today s Objectives What does a highly effective partnership look like? Mature internship / co-op programs Assessment of programs Added academic content during internships/co-op Industry-based projects in courses Putting it all together

ABET Linkages Why Industry Involvement is Important Students must be prepared for engineering practice through a curriculum culminating in a major design experience incorporating appropriate engineering standards and multiple realistic constraints There must be sufficient faculty to accommodate adequate levels of student-faculty interaction, student advising and counseling, university service activities, professional development, and interactions with industrial and professional practitioners, as well as employers of students.

Effective Partnerships

Highly Effective Partnerships Accomplish work together that would be difficult or impossible to accomplish alone define clear mutual benefits Build a shared sense of commitment and responsibility Offer opportunities for people to learn from each other and share resources National Service-Learning Clearinghouse (2008)

Guidelines for Highly Effective Partnerships Make sure everyone shares a commitment to a common vision goals and objectives Be sensitive to the needs, styles, and limitations of other collaborators Involve people at all levels Maintain frequent and open communication Be sure everyone understands expectations National Service-Learning Clearinghouse (2008)

Commitment Relationships Trust Characteristics of Effective Partnerships Willingness to share Needs, wants and desires Constant and clear communication Ongoing assessment National Center for Media Engagement (2010)

Company Student Work Relationships Types/Options Summer jobs Apprenticeships Part-time / Full-time Internships Co-ops Projects

Company Student Work Relationships Considerations: part-time, full-time length of time (short-term, semester, year-long) co-op (parallel, alternating) projects (workplace, coursebased) paid, unpaid credit-bearing, noncredit-bearing location one consistent role, rotating roles

Engineering Co-op at GVSU Mandatory co-op 5 engineering programs computer, electrical, interdisciplinary, mechanical, product design & manufacturing Secondary admission Three semesters of full-time work with the same organization

GVSU Engineering Co-op Program Fall Winter Spring/Summer (Sept - Dec) (Jan - April) (May - Aug) 2009/2010: Foundational Foundational Open Courses Courses 2010/2011: Foundational Foundational Co-op I Courses Courses 2011/2012: Major Co-op II Major Courses Courses 2012/2013: Co-op III Major Major Courses Courses

Engineering Co-op at GVSU 3 credits per co-op semester 10 total credits including co-op prep course Faculty assigned as advisers and evaluators

Effective Industry- Education Partnerships Focus on internship/co-ops and projects In groups of three or four: Come up with criteria of what will /what will not create an effective partnership between company - student - school/university

Internship / Co-op Programs

Mature Internship and Co-op Programs Effective Relationships Regular, on-going communication Knowledge of needs and expectations shared by all, and at multiple levels of the organization Benefits to all parties clearly understood Jointly assess the status/progress

Mature Internship and Co-op Programs Effective Relationships What does this look like? Research project on effective coop experiences

What is Socialization? Transition from classroom to workplace involves socialization to an organization and occupational roles Socialization (Van Maanen & Schein, 1979): Is the process by which people "learn the ropes" of a particular organizational role; Is the fashion in which an individual is taught and learns what behaviors and perspectives are customary and desirable within the work setting as well as ones that are not; Involves the transmission of information and values which is fundamentally a cultural matter; Accompanies each move, from outside to inside and with each move in rank; and Is more important at lower-level positions.

Why is Socialization Important? Unsuccessful socialization results in Student Perspective: learning outcomes not likely accomplished satisfaction with the experience unlikely potential for dissatisfaction with the career field negative impact to self esteem and confidence Education Organization Perspective: retention in academic programs negatively impacted exacerbated in high-demand academic areas less support from employer organization

Why is Socialization Important? Unsuccessful socialization results in Employer Perspective: lower productivity from the student negative morale that could influence current full-time employees and other future students that may want to work for the organization greatly limited potential for retention of the student after the experience thereby minimizing the return on investment

Five Stage Model of Socialization for Internships / Co-op* 1. pre-entry 2. match-making for the intern/co-op position 3. entry for the intern/co-op position 4. match-making for the post-graduation position 5. accelerated entry for the post-graduation position * Plouff (2006)

Co-op/Internship Prep Courses Content: Job Search Prep Workplace Prep Co-op Role Prep Employer Involvement Assessment for: Lifelong Learning Ethics Communication Contemporary Issues

Effective Employer Preparation for Internships/Co-op Develop an intern/co-op philosophy Communicate it internally and to educational partners and students Develop an intern/co-op plan Identify goals and objectives Identify need(s) Identify projects and tasks Identify knowledge/skills/abilities needed Identify supervisor(s) and mentor(s)

Effective Employer Preparation for Internships/Co-op Develop an intern/co-op plan (cont.) Develop position description Secure needed commitments and resources Communicate description to partner institutions Network with students through partner institution events

Assessment of Internship / Co-op

Assessment During Co-op (3 per student / 1 each semester) By Student: Evaluation of Experience By Employer: Evaluation of Student By Program: Site Visit Evaluation

Co-op Program Involvement at Assessment Process Levels Student: Supervisor + Student Evals Course: Co-op Prep, Academic Components of Co-op Program: Aggregate Co-op Feedback, Faculty Site Visits

Co-op Assessment Tools Industry Supervisor Evaluations Three per student (one per co-op semester) Faculty Site Visit Three per student (one per co-op semester) Student Evaluations Three per student

Program Outcomes and Performance Criteria Program Outcome: Student has the ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems Performance Criteria: Student can troubleshoot a technical problem by logical deduction Student can effectively engage in engineering projects within industry settings

Program Outcomes and Performance Criteria Program Outcome: Student has an ability to communicate effectively Performance Criteria: Student can produce a technical document written to industry standards Student can effectively present technical information to an audience of peers, customers, or employers

Program Outcomes and Performance Criteria Program Outcome: Student has the ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability Performance Criteria: Student can build a prototype of a design and demonstrate that it meets performance specifications

Industry Involvement at Multiple Assessment Levels Company A: Participates in prep class practice interviews Sponsors a co-op student (works with student) Sponsors a junior-level course project Sponsors a senior capstone project Serves on Advisory Board(s) Participates in surveys (objectives and outcomes)

Feedback Processes Formal/Direct Informal/Direct Co-op Site Visit by Faculty Planning Meetings Evaluations of Students Practice Interviews Surveys Advisory Board Meetings

Program Outcomes Quantitative: Likert scale summaries Set goals/targets Qualitative: Industry comments

Feedback Loops When/How Course Level: End of semester course assessment Semi-annual outcome assessments Program Level: Program curriculum meetings Annual curriculum review/discussions Advisory Board meetings

New Co-op Student Preparation Experience Matters: Summary completed each semester Used in freshman courses and co-op prep course

Academic Content in Internships / Co-op

Academic Content to Enhance Internships/Co-ops workplace environment relates well with delivery/application of many program outcomes frees up time in core courses for other content can make assessment from courses more robust (triangulate data)

Internship/Co-op Example Format Materials posted online (Blackboard) Video Text (papers, notes, books) Web content Podcast Online quizzes Pre- and Post-tests

GVSU Co-op Example Targeted for 30-60 minutes of time commitment per module No more than 8 hours per semester Each module open for 1-2 weeks Faculty member available for online office hours, video chat, discussion board

GVSU Online Curriculum Engineering Ethics A. Basics and codes, workplace ethics and responsibility dimensions B. Background and theory, solving problems C. Honesty, integrity, and reliability D.Globalization; Environmental issues Engineering Professionalism A. Professionalism in the workplace (Unwritten Laws of Engineering) B. Professional affiliation, lifelong learning and professional development C. Entrepreneurship

GVSU Online Curriculum Engineering Communications A. General communication ethics (chain of command, emails, etc.) B. Written documents (Project Reports and Progress Reports) C. Written documents (Proposals and Technical Instructions) D.Oral presentations Engineering Economics A. Time value of money, economic equivalence B. Present-worth analysis, payback period C. Equivalent-worth analysis, make or buy decisions D.Rate of return analysis

GVSU Online Curriculum Project Management A. Project phases, work breakdown structure B. Project planning and monitoring C. Basics of supply chain management D.Budgeting, cost-benefit analysis E. Project risk and uncertainty

GVSU Online Curriculum

Industry-based Course Projects

Industry-based Course Projects Project-based learning Follow same principles of effective partnerships Projects conducted in sophomore through senior-year courses Generated from internship/co-op relationships Requires clearly-defined and agreed upon scope and outcomes Require strong company project leader and mentor(s)

Integrated Course Involvement with Industry Example from PDM Program: Fall: Manufacturing Processes Analytical Tools for Product Design Dynamic System Modeling and Control Winter: Manufacturing Control Systems Advanced Product Design

Senior Capstone Projects Interdisciplinary Larger scope and scale Graduating co-op student often the project leader Successful completion when employer signs off on project ABET criteria clearly satisfied

References National Center for Media Engagement (2010) http://www.mediaengage.org/plandesign/partners/successfulp artnerships.pdf National Service-Learning Clearinghouse (2008) http://www.servicelearning.org/instant_info/fact_sheets/tribal_f acts/partnerships Plouff, Chris. (2006). Socialization of Undergraduate Engineering Students into Work-Related Organizations and Occupational Roles through a Cooperative Education Program http://commons.emich.edu/theses/103/

Further Discussion