Service learning and empathy in technical communication courses within engineering education: A case study to improve the “culture of disengagement” of engineering students

Date

2019-08

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

Both industry and engineering accreditation bodies have outlined outcomes for engineering education to develop more socially minded engineers. However, a recent longitudinal study found a disturbing trend of decreased public engagement in engineering students during and even after their formal engineering studies. The first step towards public engagement is empathizing with them to understand their needs. Empathy is an area of growing interest in engineering education with suggestions that a broad cultural shift is necessary to facilitate increased discussion of empathy and public welfare. One popular technique for engaging students with real-world problems that affect the community is service learning. Service learning pedagogy is an experiential learning technique that exposes students to serving community not-for-profit organizations while simultaneously meeting the academic learning objectives of the course and engaging students in reflection on their experience. The service-learning project under study required engineering students in a technical communication course to work with a not-for-profit client and adapt a technical document for a particular target audience the client was trying to reach. This mixed-methods case study examines a service learning project in ta technical communication course within an engineering program to understand if it can help reverse the trend of decreased engagement in engineering students and enhance student empathy. Quantitative data was gathered by testing student participants using the Toronto Empathy Questionnaire and repeating the public engagement survey to see what effect service learning and humanities-based instruction has on students’ engagement with public welfare. Qualitative data included an analysis of individual student reflections, a client interview, and instructor field notes to triangulate the data. The major findings of this study show a similar quantitative decline in empathy as was already found in public engagement in the original study that prompted this research. However, when paired with the qualitative data, it revealed a picture of students who wanted and believed themselves to be engaged and empathetic with the public, but unable to take the necessary actions because of other factors in engineering education including an overwhelming workload, English as Additional Language challenges, and team dysfunction. It seems these distractions in individual instances become a habit of apathy that becomes an overarching culture of disengagement in engineering education.

Description

Keywords

Empathy, Engineering education, Technical communication, Service learning

Citation