Comparative Quantitative Study on Learning Outcomes of Major Study Groups of an Information and Communication Technology Bachelor Educational Program
Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 32794
Comparative Quantitative Study on Learning Outcomes of Major Study Groups of an Information and Communication Technology Bachelor Educational Program

Authors: Kari Björn, Mikael Soini

Abstract:

Higher Education system reforms, especially Finnish system of Universities of Applied Sciences in 2014 are discussed. The new steering model is based on major legislative changes, output-oriented funding and open information. The governmental steering reform, especially the financial model and the resulting institutional level responses, such as a curriculum reforms are discussed, focusing especially in engineering programs. The paper is motivated by management need to establish objective steering-related performance indicators and to apply them consistently across all educational programs. The close relationship to governmental steering and funding model imply that internally derived indicators can be directly applied. Metropolia University of Applied Sciences (MUAS) as a case institution is briefly introduced, focusing on engineering education in Information and Communications Technology (ICT), and its related programs. The reform forced consolidation of previously separate smaller programs into fewer units of student application. New curriculum ICT students have a common first year before they apply for a Major. A framework of parallel and longitudinal comparisons is introduced and used across Majors in two campuses. The new externally introduced performance criteria are applied internally on ICT Majors using data ex-ante and ex-post of program merger.  A comparative performance of the Majors after completion of joint first year is established, focusing on previously omitted Majors for completeness of analysis. Some new research questions resulting from transfer of Majors between campuses and quota setting are discussed. Practical orientation identifies best practices to share or targets needing most attention for improvement. This level of analysis is directly applicable at student group and teaching team level, where corrective actions are possible, when identified. The analysis is quantitative and the nature of the corrective actions are not discussed. Causal relationships and factor analysis are omitted, because campuses, their staff and various pedagogical implementation details contain still too many undetermined factors for our limited data. Such qualitative analysis is left for further research. Further study must, however, be guided by the relevance of the observations.

Keywords: Engineering education, integrated curriculum, learning outcomes, performance measurement.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1129662

Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 835

References:


[1] Finnish Ministry of Justice. Ammattikorkeakoululaki 14.11.2014/932. Accessed 28/02/2017 from http://www.finlex.fi/fi/laki/alkup/2014/20140932
[2] Finnish Ministry of Education and Culture. Opetus- ja kulttuuriministeriön asetus ammattikorkeakoulujen perusrahoituksen laskentakriteereistä, 15.9.2016/814. Accessed 28/02/2017 from http://www.finlex.fi/fi/laki/alkup/2016/20160814
[3] Metropolia, Information and Communication Technology, Academics. Accessed 28/02/2017 from http://www.metropolia.fi/en/academics/degree-programmes-in-finnish/information-and-communication-technology/
[4] K. Björn, M. Soini, “Theme-based integrated curriculum development and project learning experiences”, 9th international Symposium on Advances in Technology Education, 2015.
[5] K. Björn, M. Soini, “A Quantitative Evaluation of Learning Outcomes after Second Year of Theme-Based Curriculum in Health Technology”, 10th international Symposium on Advances in Technology Education, 2016.
[6] K. Björn, M. Soini, “A quantitative evaluation of learning outcomes after second year of theme-based curriculum in health technology”, 10th International Symposium on Advances in Technology Education, 2016.
[7] H. Valmu, E. Kupila, R. Vartia, T. Heikkinen, T. Fischer T. “Continuous Assessment and Collaborative Pedagogy as Tools to Improve the Learning Outcomes in the Degree programmes in Electronics and Electrical Engineering of Helsinki Metropolia UAS”, 9th International Symposium on Advances in Technology Education, 2015.
[8] K. Björn, A. “Lecture, Flip, Integrate and Focus: A case Study on Stepwise Transformation of an Industrial Networking Course from Lecturing to Integrated Team Learning”, 11th annual International Technology, Education and Development Conference, 2017.
[9] M. Soini, K. Björn, “A case study on theme-based approach in health technology engineering education: physiological measurement technology”, 10th International Symposium on Advances in Technology Education, 2016.
[10] J. Rugelj, J. L. Marzo, S. Knockaert, R. Van Steenberghe, L. Schoofs, J. Salonen, K. Björn, C. Vaz de Carvalho, “Advanced Networking Technologies Study Programme: A Design Based on Competences”, Sixth Advanced International Conference on Telecommunications, 2010.
[11] L. W. Anderson, D. Krathwohl. ”A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching and Assessing: a Revision of Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives”. Longman, New York, 2001.
[12] J. Gonzales, R. Wagenaar, R. (eds.), “Tuning educational Structures in Europe. Universities Contribution to the Bologna Process. Final Report, Pilot Project – Phase 2”, Universidad de Deusto, 2005.
[13] Council of Europe. Using E-learning in Intercultural Non-formal Education Activities, 2012. Accessed 20/02/2017 from https://www.coe.int/t/dg4/youth/Source/Training/Quality_NFE/2012_Mapping_Elearning_study.pdf
[14] D. Crawley, J. Malmqvist, S. Östlund, D. Brodeur. “Rethinking Engineering Education, The CDIO Approach”, Springer, 2007.
[15] Worldwide CDIO Initiative (2013). Accessed 20/02/2017 from http://www.cdio.org/
[16] M. Soini, K. Björn, “A Case Study on Theme-Based Approach in Health Technology Engineering Education: Customer Oriented Software Applications”, 19th International Conference on Education, Research and Innovation, 2017.