2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(3fs) An Evidence-Based Approach to Chemical Engineering Education
Author
Teaching Interests: As a scholar of engineering and physics education research, I view the classroom as a laboratoryâa place to develop more effective and targeted instructional tools to improve how we teach. Though research in learning science provides a strong framework from which to construct good teaching practices, a large amount of work remains to be done in designing targeted instructional tools. The process is iterative: designing an instructional activity based on our research, testing it in courses, measuring the outcomes, refining the activity, and testing again. In a physics course I developed, we developed a problem-solving template designed to guide students through the expert problem-solving process as they worked on in-class activities, homework, and exams. Though this practice improved the quality of these studentsâ problem solving, including their ability to frame the problem and write a solution plan, they struggled to translate their plans into effective action. In the coming iteration of this course, we have devised a set of materials that will provide targeted practice in doing just this. Because my teaching experience spans a variety of institutions, disciplines, and student backgroundsâfrom tutoring community college veterans in statistics and chemistry, to teaching transport phenomena to Caltech graduate studentsâI have a uniquely broad perspective on how students learn. This allows me to compare how various instructional practices work (or donât) for different groups of students in different disciplines, and gives me a more diverse array of teaching tools from which to choose.