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COMPUTER-AIDED PBL IN A BLENDED ENVIRONMENT FOR IMPROVING THE PROBLEM-SOLVING SKILLS IN STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING SUBJECTS
Universitat Jaume I, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Construction (SPAIN)
About this paper:
Appears in: INTED2020 Proceedings
Publication year: 2020
Pages: 3187-3192
ISBN: 978-84-09-17939-8
ISSN: 2340-1079
doi: 10.21125/inted.2020.0918
Conference name: 14th International Technology, Education and Development Conference
Dates: 2-4 March, 2020
Location: Valencia, Spain
Abstract:
There are three relevant facts about engineering education:
i) engineers apply scientific and technical principles to solve problems that make our lives easier.
ii) engineering competencies include solving problems related to their field of study,
iii) teaching the subject must be consistent with the fact that the methods currently used in the practice of the profession are based in computers.

One of the most appropriate teaching methodologies in STEM seems to be problem-based learning (PBL), it is the problems that guide the contents of the subject. In this technique you can identify several phases grouped in defining the problem, transforming it into a mathematical model, making the appropriate calculations and evaluating the results. The problem will be adequate if you also use the necessary tools to approach the problems addressed to those of the real practice of the engineer, so that computer tools have been introduced to perform the calculation phase, leaving more time available to define the appropriate questions, translate them to a mathematical model, and finally to investigate the results.

Under these premises, a project for the implementation of these methodologies has been developed in the subjects of structural analysis of the degrees in industrial technologies engineering, and in agrifood engineering of the Universitat Jaume I of Castellón, and which is based on four pillars:
i) computer-assisted PBL,
ii) use of evaluation rubrics,
iii) peer review, and
iv) blended-learning.

The initial results show that, despite the initial reluctance of students to use the mathematical and computer tools, when the proposed problem is more real, and therefore the numerical complexity increases, they appreciate the use of these tools, and indirectly, as the estudents master the tools, they can investigate the problem more deeply. Additionally, they see the use of these tools, appropriate for the calculations and documentation related to the final degree project.
Keywords:
Problem-based learning, STEM, problem-solving competence, b-learning, peer review, free software, computer aided, evaluation rubrics.