Hosted by Middlesex University’s Dr Homeira Shayesteh, Senior Lecturer in Construction, Architecture and BIM and Pedagogic Research Group Lead for the Faculty of Science and Technology and supported by the University’s Centre for Academic Practice Enhancement (CAPE).
Date: Monday 19 May 2025
Time: 12:30pm – 1:30pm (UK Time)
This is an online event. Event URL will be sent via registration email.
The Webinar will be led by Dr Patricia Xavier and Prof. Sarah Jayne Hitt from the New Model Institute for Technology and Engineering (NMITE) and will discuss challenges and barriers to pedagogy research in engineering education and explore approaches to overcoming them in order to develop and enhance scholarship of teaching and learning.
Professor Sarah Jayne Hitt was one of NMITE’s founding faculty members, joining the institution in 2019. Before that she worked at the Colorado School of Mines, where she was Director of the Writing Center and Director of the McBride Honors Program in Public Affairs. Professor Hitt also serves as Project Manager for the Engineering Professors Council’s Ethics, Sustainability, and Complex Systems Toolkits.
Dr Patricia Xavier is an engineering educator, interested in interdisciplinarity and its complexities. She is the Programme Lead for BSc Construction Management. Patricia is fascinated by engineering identities and habits, and what it means to become an engineer. Her research includes characterising the intersection between personal and professional value systems, how the process of training appears to prioritise certain habits (e.g., an adherence to tradition and authority), and de-prioritises others (e.g., the role and value of considering emotion and ethics in engineering design).
NMITE (The New Model Institution for Technology and Engineering) is a new university in Hereford that is designed to be different. NMITE uses block learning, challenge-led assessment and liberal studies-informed team teaching to curate immersive learning experiences and develop work-ready graduates. The courses in Integrated and Mechanical Engineering and Construction Management all have intensive industry engagement built in, with students getting regular opportunities to work on challenges set by industry challenge sponsors. The liberal studies teaching encourages student to engage critically with the roles that engineering and technology have in shaping society. NMITE also has open entry criteria and does not require maths or physics A-level to start Year 1 of the engineering programmes, instead providing catch-up opportunities for students to build up from their GCSE-level knowledge during their first year of study. NMITE provides a model for alternative thinking about Higher Education – challenging traditional assumptions about what kinds of students can become great engineers and about what engineering learning looks like.
The Webinar will explore interdisciplinary approaches to pedagogy research and is open to all Faculties and disciplines.
For any questions, please contact Dr Homeira Shayesteh: H.Shayesteh@mdx.ac.uk
Please register via this link:
https://mdxstaffdev.libcal.com/event/4372231