ERC's Creative Engineering Design Project Expands Student Engineering Engagement in Denver

Outcome/Accomplishment

In an effort to engage high school students in the engineering design process, the NSF-funded Engineering Research Center (ERC) Advancing Sustainability through Powered Infrastructure for Roadway Electrification (ASPIRE), headquartered at Utah State University, has introduced a team-based electric vehicle- and environmental justice-focused high school engineering course in Denver, Colorado.

Impact/Benefits

Creative Engineering Design is a project-based engineering course that engages high school students, especially students from underrepresented and underserved communities, to explore widespread and accessible vehicle electrification as a solution for transportation-related air quality and climate change. Students learn through hands-on and project-based engineering activities connected to everyday applications.

Explanation/Background

The Creative Engineering Design course had a successful first year pilot at two diverse Denver high schools, engaging two teachers, 18 classes, and 468 students. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, the course weaves in threads from the engineering design process, engineering skills development, and environmental justice. The course culminates in a model electric vehicle design-build-test-iterate project.

Students also build knowledge about the intersections between particulate matter air pollution, air quality, health impacts, and environmental injustice in communities using ArcGIS StoryMap technology.

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Location

Logan, Utah

e-mail

Start Year

Energy and Sustainability

Energy and Sustainability Icon
Energy and Sustainability Icon

Energy, Sustainability, and Infrastructure

Lead Institution

Utah State University

Core Partners

Purdue University, University of Colorado, University of Texas at El Paso
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Outcome/Accomplishment

In an effort to engage high school students in the engineering design process, the NSF-funded Engineering Research Center (ERC) Advancing Sustainability through Powered Infrastructure for Roadway Electrification (ASPIRE), headquartered at Utah State University, has introduced a team-based electric vehicle- and environmental justice-focused high school engineering course in Denver, Colorado.

Location

Logan, Utah

e-mail

Start Year

Energy and Sustainability

Energy and Sustainability Icon
Energy and Sustainability Icon

Energy, Sustainability, and Infrastructure

Lead Institution

Utah State University

Core Partners

Purdue University, University of Colorado, University of Texas at El Paso

Impact/benefits

Creative Engineering Design is a project-based engineering course that engages high school students, especially students from underrepresented and underserved communities, to explore widespread and accessible vehicle electrification as a solution for transportation-related air quality and climate change. Students learn through hands-on and project-based engineering activities connected to everyday applications.

Explanation/Background

The Creative Engineering Design course had a successful first year pilot at two diverse Denver high schools, engaging two teachers, 18 classes, and 468 students. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, the course weaves in threads from the engineering design process, engineering skills development, and environmental justice. The course culminates in a model electric vehicle design-build-test-iterate project.

Students also build knowledge about the intersections between particulate matter air pollution, air quality, health impacts, and environmental injustice in communities using ArcGIS StoryMap technology.