Discover EM: Take the on-demand module.
Dive into the 3Cs of EM - Curiosity, Connections, and Creating Value.
Get tactics for teaching students to be entrepreneurially minded.
Download posters for your walls.
Apply EM: Get activities for the classroom.
Duration: 30-40 minutes
Student teams will go through the 4 stages of an entrepreneur’s journey. They'll discuss engineering curriculum knowledge, resources on campus, and legal/ethical issues. They'll also have to decide what to do with their risk/reward cards!
Duration: 45 minutes
Construct a tower from playing cards and transport it to the testing area without it folding! Students practice critical thinking, customer awareness, teamwork, and learn from failure in this absorbing, single-class activity.
Duration: 50 minutes
Do your students have an appreciation for the types of errors made in engineering—and their consequences? Help students see the consequences of assumptions as well as opportunities for new solutions.
Duration: 9.5 hours over 5 weeks
Adopt this project in any discipline involved in the development of consumer products. Students will enjoy making meaningful and realistic modifications and constructing prototypes based on their designs.
This was just a sample of the many activities and projects community members publish on Engineering Unleashed cards!
Publish EM: Share your own activities.
The Card Author Guide walks you through creating your card from start to finish, including what to upload where, how to use tags and keywords, and other features to showcase your content for others to use.
Explore EM: Take a workshop, course, or module.
The EUFD program is designed for you and your career, with collaborative experiences and year-long coaching. Tap into MakerSpark, set up a Problem Solving Studio, integrate EM into your curriculum, and much more.
These workshops are community-led by faculty and institutions around the nation.
These can include workshops leading to Fellowships, embedding EM in your department, and designing impact-driven learning experiences.
These virtual workshops, courses, and modules are created by Engineering Unleashed community members for the benefit of the community, such as the art of story-telling, and engineering education research.
Observe EM: Experiences in action.
"Technology cannot be developed in a vacuum," writes Aaron Sakulich (Worcester Polytechnic Institute). "The context of the social systems in which the technology is deployed is critical to whether or not there will be successful outcomes."
AnnMarie Thomas, director of Playful Learning Lab, says we get ideas from the people we meet, the stuff on our desks, the things we read, the things we play with, and maybe even what we had for dinner.
Developing good character is a long-term process. So how do you get started? Pat Croskery (late of The Ohio Northern University) used the entrepreneurial mindset to help engineers understand how ethics connects to creating value.
What happens when you try to expand entrepreneurially minded learning beyond your own classroom? Tackle the "change challenge" from a different angle with Julia Williams (Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology), including the “CAVE” people: "Colleagues Against Virtually Everything!"