Taking the Challenge: An Exploratory Study of the Challenge-Based Learning Context in Higher Education Institutions across Three Different Continents
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Theoretical Framework
2. Methodology
- Transversal dimension (historical within-case developmental overview)—context and rationale for the implementation of CBL in each of the cases are described.
- Vertical dimension (within-case description presents social actors and influences)—attitude and roles of students, faculty, and stakeholders.
- Horizontal dimension (contrasting cases)—success factors and opportunity areas of each CBL implementation.
3. Results
3.1. Transversal Dimension: Context and Rationale of CBL Implementation
3.1.1. Tecnologico de Monterrey, Mexico
3.1.2. Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands
3.1.3. Dublin City University, Ireland
3.1.4. Chinese Universities
3.1.5. Concrete CBL Courses Examples in the Four Case Studies
- Two successful examples of CBL at TEC. The first case concerns a system capable of helping civil protection personnel monitor, guide, and record crucial data in a seismic emergency, “TECuidamos”. This system was developed for a year by students of Telecommunications Engineering and Electronic Systems, tutored by professors in Engineering and Education, through a web administrator and using route planning algorithms hosted on a cloud server to provide the user with an efficient escape route in real-time (https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/14/9/4931, accessed on 15 January 2023). The second case concerns the design and application of an academic cultural experience for university students who engaged in biodiversity preservation while developing research and problem-solving skills, “Axolotl Challenge: Saving Biodiversity Through Engineering.” This experience focused on the generation of engineering solutions for the conservation of biodiversity and chinampas (floating agricultural gardens) in Xochimilco, a UNESCO World Heritage City (https://sciendo.com/article/10.2478/jtes-2022-0005, accessed on 15 January 2023).
- TU/e innovation Space project. TU/e innovation Space project is a graduate-level course aiming toward challenge-based learning in interdisciplinary student teams. The course is open to students from all university programs. However, it often attracts Industrial Engineering students. Students work on open-ended assignments in close interaction with high-tech companies and societal organizations in the university ecosystem. The course combines the design and engineering of a product/service/system and new business development. One of the main learning goals is “integration”, operationalized when students develop a problem-driven, creative, and integrative design, resulting in an original and validated prototype that balances desirability, feasibility, and viability. Rather than lectures, the course involves studio-style group work, self-study, and personal and team development. Out-of-the-box pressure-cooker-style workshops are given, either online or offline. Topics include pitching ideas, project management, interdisciplinary team building, or developing questions from ill-defined problems. Students are in the lead of their learning processes. Instructors take on the role of coaches in a supportive and co-learning manner. The course is part of educational innovation in TU/e Innovation Space.
- DCU hackathon academic intervention. A multidisciplinary and fully online hackathon for First Year science undergraduate students was carried out in 2022. This event was planned, developed, and delivered within a shared module—CS150 Interdisciplinary Science & BE112 Professional Skills for Scientists and Engineers—to support the development of a range of skills in students in addition to their disciplinary knowledge. A total of 227 students participated in the hackathon challenge set up to mimic a typically fast-paced, intense hackathon experience. Students collaborated intensively over three days to identify an essential question based on a ‘big idea’ of interest, investigate it as a team, and create a solution they ultimately had to present in an elevator pitch. Academics and teaching assistants were available at designated times to support students in teasing out and developing their solutions. The elevator pitches were attended by stakeholders from other areas of the university who acted as judges and provided constructive feedback on the presentations of a generally high standard. The hackathon utilized various innovative tools and technologies from the DCU Virtual Learning Environment and beyond. Educators should be committed to leading the students to develop competencies and skills that will awaken them in critically evaluating and developing strategies for their future: “engagement, groupwork co-operation, problem-solving ability, vision broadening, awareness of real-world problems... to summarise, learning” (https://www.dcu.ie/teu/edge-discovery-podcast-series, accessed on 15 January 2023).
- SJTU brief course description. Engineering Practice is a compulsory practical course for all engineering students (mainly first-year students) launched by the Student Innovation Center of SJTU and jointly developed by interdisciplinary teachers and educational researchers. It follows the principle of “student-centered” teaching, with two types of projects: “propositional” and “open-ended”, which are based on students’ interests. The projects focus on developing core skills such as analysis, synthesis, logical reasoning, critical thinking, and problem-solving. In addition, SJTU has built traditional practice spaces, modern manufacturing practice spaces, and electronic and electrical laboratories, creating 7 × 24 h open practice space, and established practice platforms with famous domestic enterprises to guide students to pay attention to social hotspots and technology frontiers based on the basic knowledge of the curriculum, to explore innovative ideas, methods and solve practical problems. In terms of teaching, it consolidates students’ theoretical basis and skill foundation, strengthens their innovation ability through project practice, establishes an online modular resource library, adopts the teaching mode of “large class lecture + small class guidance”, and focuses on process-oriented and diverse learning assessment of students.
3.2. Vertical Dimension: Roles and Attitudes
3.2.1. Instructors’ Role and Attitudes
3.2.2. Student’s Attitude
3.2.3. Role of Stakeholders
3.3. Horizontal Dimension: Success Factors and Opportunity Areas
3.3.1. Success Factors
3.3.2. Opportunity Areas
4. Discussion
Study Limitations and Future Work
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Technique | CBL | PBL | PrBL | DBL |
---|---|---|---|---|
Learning object | Real-world problems | Hypothetical designed problems | Academic, specific, world-related task | Discipline-specific |
Object characteristics | Open, problematic, real solution needed | Often fictional, not real solutions are needed | A predefined problem requires a solution | Open-ended, real-life/authentic, hands-on, multi/interdisciplinary |
Expected outcome | Variable solutions to develop a more profound knowledge of the subjects. | To solve the problem at hand. Student’s dialogue to reach a conclusion | To follow the plan to the end to carry out the unique assigned project | Acquisition of disciplinary knowledge and skills development |
Expected product | Open, creative, contextual, and innovative solutions to result in concrete actions | None, focus to learn | A presentation or implementation of the solution | The learning process is leading. Innovative solutions |
Student’s role | Analyze, design, develop and execute | Work with the problem | Work with the assigned project | Gather knowledge, analyze, explore, validate, and apply |
Instructor’s roles | Designer, coach, co-researcher | Facilitator, guide, adviser | Facilitator, manager | Coach, process and self-development, facilitator |
Assessment | Tackle the challenge in a way stakeholders measure | Ability to reason and apply their knowledge | Product | Product, process, skills, and knowledge |
Case Study | TEC | TU/e | DCU | SJTU |
---|---|---|---|---|
Country | Mexico | the Netherlands | Ireland | China |
University | Private, 26 campuses | Public, 1 campus | Public, 5 campuses | Public, 7 campuses |
Number of students | 35,000 | 14,000 | 17,000 | 40,000 |
Context of CBL implementation | Top-down institutional strategy; educational research on CBL. | Forerunner in the Netherlands and Europe in curriculum-wide implementation and research of CBL; combination of a top-down program with bottom-up initiatives. | ECIU member; strong tradition of working closely with industry and society in an interdisciplinary manner with an entrepreneurial mindset. | In October 2019, China’s Ministry of Education released ‘Quality 22, Teaching Reform’; Chinese universities actively incorporate best practices in higher education worldwide. |
Rationale of CBL implementation | With the premise of academic quality strengthening and to face 21st Century challenges and opportunities; developed and implemented a new educational model: Tec21, starting in 2012 and fully implemented in 2019. | DBL: real-life problems promote meaningful learning and self-directed groups support development of problem-solving skills since the beginning of the 21st Century; since 2019, the evolution to CBL emphasizes small-scale and flexible education, implemented as embedded curriculum practice. | Five-year project; September 2021; CBL central pillar of educational innovation. | Need to cultivate innovative talent in engineering; in 1986, PBL first recognized as a successful teaching and learning approach; proposing a new engineering education in 2017; CBL is the extension of PBL since the beginning of the 21st Century. |
Case Study | TEC | TU/e | DCU | SJTU |
---|---|---|---|---|
Instructors’ role and attitude | Interdisciplinary; collaborative and versatile. Instructors become designers, coordinators, advisors, lecturers, and evaluators. To decrease overwhelming, some institutional guidelines have been developed. | Instructors in the role of coaches who supervise knowledge acquisition and competence development. Engagement in CBL implementation through bottom-up experiments, involvement in a CBL task force, and allowing variety in interpreting CBL. | Instructors are open to change; willing to explore CBL. CBL requires planning and support, resources, and trust in students. Multiple professional learning options are available to staff. | Interdisciplinary; faculty must have accomplishments in both academia and industry; must organize and understand the direction of project implementation and provide timely guidance to students’ problems. |
Student attitudes | Resisted frustration for not solving the challenge due to lack of clarity, time, or high complexity, presenting high-stress levels, even when students received high grades. | High motivation and anxiety for open and complex challenges. Over time this anxiety decreases as students develop knowledge and skills for solving the challenge. | Students are optimistic about CBL and value engaging in authentic experiences. | CBL stimulates students’ interest and ability to use information, learn independently, and work in teams |
Role of stakeholders | Agent or entity from the manufacturing or services sector, government, civil society, or community groups with which the institution establishes a long-term collaboration link. They receive a fresh and external perspective for innovation, reach student talent, and identify trends in the organization’s development. | An innovation Space as an innovation hub was created to facilitate collaboration with the industry. Stakeholders guide students throughout the project, help in decision-making, or by resource provision. | The industry contributes in the form of lightning master classes, keynote speakers, mentors, and judges. | The role of stakeholders is limited and unclear. Subject leaders can organize training by relevant experts, conduct interdisciplinary exchanges, and provide guidance through classroom observation and data-driven feedback. |
Case Study | TEC | TU/e | DCU | SJTU |
---|---|---|---|---|
Success Factors | CBL is a keystone in the educational model. Faculty commitment to strengthening competencies. Creation and solution of international challenges. | Availability of funds to experiment with and research aspects of CBL. Organization of a CBL program. Strong faculty support staff | University’s commitment to CBL at the highest level. Faculty are keen to explore and interested in CBL. Teaching Enhancement Unit (TEU) support | Increased awareness of the fact that CBL can improve students’ skills. CBL is considered an enabler of the reinvention of the traditional class paradigm. |
Opportunity areas | Faculty must take risk in the use of technology in the classroom. Enhancement of the lifelong learning paradigm. | Overcome instructor-reported feelings of insecurity. Unfamiliarity with stakeholders and how to engage them in student scaffolding | Resolve questions regarding the time and range of support needed for CBL. Faculty engagement. | Students are accustomed to the traditional learning system. More work regarding CBL is needed. |
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van den Beemt, A.; Vázquez-Villegas, P.; Gómez Puente, S.; O’Riordan, F.; Gormley, C.; Chiang, F.-K.; Leng, C.; Caratozzolo, P.; Zavala, G.; Membrillo-Hernández, J. Taking the Challenge: An Exploratory Study of the Challenge-Based Learning Context in Higher Education Institutions across Three Different Continents. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 234. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13030234
van den Beemt A, Vázquez-Villegas P, Gómez Puente S, O’Riordan F, Gormley C, Chiang F-K, Leng C, Caratozzolo P, Zavala G, Membrillo-Hernández J. Taking the Challenge: An Exploratory Study of the Challenge-Based Learning Context in Higher Education Institutions across Three Different Continents. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(3):234. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13030234
Chicago/Turabian Stylevan den Beemt, Antoine, Patricia Vázquez-Villegas, Sonia Gómez Puente, Fiona O’Riordan, Clare Gormley, Feng-Kuang Chiang, Chuntao Leng, Patricia Caratozzolo, Genaro Zavala, and Jorge Membrillo-Hernández. 2023. "Taking the Challenge: An Exploratory Study of the Challenge-Based Learning Context in Higher Education Institutions across Three Different Continents" Education Sciences 13, no. 3: 234. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13030234
APA Stylevan den Beemt, A., Vázquez-Villegas, P., Gómez Puente, S., O’Riordan, F., Gormley, C., Chiang, F. -K., Leng, C., Caratozzolo, P., Zavala, G., & Membrillo-Hernández, J. (2023). Taking the Challenge: An Exploratory Study of the Challenge-Based Learning Context in Higher Education Institutions across Three Different Continents. Education Sciences, 13(3), 234. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13030234