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$12.5 Million National Science
Foundation Grant
To Fund UTeachEngineering Program for Educators
AUSTIN,
Texas—The University of Texas at Austin’s Cockrell School of
Engineering, College of Natural Sciences and College of
Education have been awarded $12.5 million by the National
Science Foundation (NSF) to prepare educators to teach
engineering to Texas high-school students.
“With this
grant, the NSF is building on the university’s successful
UTeach program to create a model for preparing high school
engineering educators, that we call ‘UTeachEngineering,’”
says David Allen, a chemical engineering professor and the
principal investigator for the newly developed program.
“Texas is one of just a few states aggressively pursuing
year-long high school engineering courses, and the effort
here will help define how other states approach engineering
education in high school.”
The Austin
Independent School District will partner with the university
in developing and evaluating UTeachEngineering, which will
commence summer 2009.
“Collaboration
with Engineering is an important step forward for UTeach
that will not only help address the shortage of engineering
teachers, but also the shortage in the critical areas of
physics and chemistry,” says Michael Marder, co-director of
UTeach Natural Sciences and associate dean for Mathematics
and Science Education.
The
UTeachEngineering program targets future and current
teachers, providing multiple avenues to prepare them to
teach high school engineering. University faculty will use
half of the five-year grant funding for course development,
lab development and salaries. The other half of the grant
will provide stipends, scholarships and fellowships to
students and teachers working toward engineering teaching
certification.
Current teachers
will benefit from two curricula developed through the grant:
a six-week Engineering Summer Institute for Teachers and a
UTeach Master of Arts in Science and Engineering Education,
which takes place over three summers. The curriculum for
prospective teachers will target undergraduate students in
engineering and the natural sciences, and lead to a
bachelor’s degree in a scientific or engineering field as
well as dual teaching certification in science and
engineering. Addressing the need for trained engineering
teachers is especially crucial in Texas because of a new law
that requires high school graduates starting in 2011 to
complete four years of science. One year can be a course in
engineering.
“Engineering is
about design, using science and mathematics to build what we
imagine,” says Allen, who holds the Gertz Regents Chair in
Chemical Engineering and is the director of the university’s
Center for Energy and Environmental Resources. “In teaching
engineering, we want to teach students how to pull together
what they’ve learned in science and math to build their
dreams. Teaching design, where there are many correct
answers, requires different skills and tools than teaching
science and math, where there is often only one correct
answer.”
In its first
five years, UTeachEngineering will involve 650 teachers.
Allen and his team will recruit Hispanic and African
American participants, particularly from urban centers and
the Texas-Mexico border area. Stipends and fellowships will
be awarded to current teachers and scholarships will be
awarded to undergraduate students interested in teaching
careers.
Associate
Professor Anthony Petrosino of the College of Education says
the partnership uniquely combines the nationally recognized
academic strengths of the College of Education, the College
of Natural Sciences and the Cockrell School.
“The grant will
allow researchers a real chance to advance our understanding
of effective teacher preparation and development, while also
making significant advances in addressing critical shortages
of highly qualified professionals in science, technology,
engineering and mathematics-related K-12 education,” says
Petrosino, a co-principal investigator.
Key to the
UTeachEngineering program are four new courses focusing on
engineering content and pedagogy: Fundamentals in
Engineering and Design, Knowing and Learning in Engineering,
Engineering Energy Systems and Design of Machines and
Systems. In addition to the four new courses, the
UTeachEngineering program will leverage existing curricula
from the original UTeach, which began in 1997 as a way to
prepare a new generation of secondary math, science and
computer science instructors. It has become a national model
and is being replicated at a dozen universities nationwide.
The other
co-principal investigators include: Richard Crawford,
mechanical engineering professor and the Temple Foundation
Endowed Faculty Fellow No. 3, and Michael Houser, assistant
superintendent for human resources development and
information systems for the Austin Independent School
District.
To learn more
about UTeachEngineering, go to:
http://uteach.engr.utexas.edu.
For the UTeach program, visit:
http://uteach.utexas.edu.
For information on the Cockrell School of Engineering, go to
http://www.engr.utexas.edu, and for the College of Education,
visit:
http://www.edb.utexas.edu/education.
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