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Creating Creative Educational Opportunities among Engineering and Arts Students

2024 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Abdullah Ibrahim, Roudha Al-Khaldi, Doaa Shokry Al Emam, Yasser Al Hamidi, Marwan Khraisheh

Summary

This paper is not about microplastics — it describes an educational model that integrates engineering and arts students through design-thinking collaborative projects.

This paper aims at introducing new multidisciplinary activities between students from the Engineering and Arts majors. It sheds the light on how engineering students can be prepared to become 'outside the box thinkers' by interacting and working on common projects with students from the arts and design majors. The collaborative efforts revolved around the aspects of "design thinking", an innovative and broad project based educational model that uses a systematic approach towards problem solving. With traditional engineering education, students are accustomed to breaking down theoretical problems and solving them using standard procedures. Although such a way of teaching instils analytical and methodological thinking, but it is not enough to prepare students to be creative in solving future problems. Research shows that engineers who practice one of the visual arts develop enhanced observational capabilities, which help them to be more effective and innovative. Taking it a step further, the design thinking process has proven to be phenomenally successful in the past, in that it better prepares students to face the challenges of the industrial world, by instilling qualities such as empathy, teamwork and adaptability. By collaborating with students from artistical backgrounds, engineering students can benefit from the creative thinking of art majors. This engineering-art connection also works in the opposite direction. Art students would simultaneously gain vision on how to bring their ideas to life more realistically. Through collaboration with engineering students, they would acquire systematic thinking and planning. In addition, they would learn scientific and engineering facts about their designs that would help them grow as artists themselves.

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