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Learning Environments and Evidence-Based Practices in Bioengineering and Biomedical Engineering.

Kristen BilliarDonald P GaverKenneth BarbeeAnita SinghJohn D DesJardinsBeth PruittJoe TranquilloGlenn GaudetteBeth WinkelsteinLee MakowskiJennifer R AmosAnn SaterbakJoe LeDouxBrian HelmkeMichele GrimmPaul BenkeserLeAnn Dourte SeganBryan PfisterDavid MeaneyTreena ArinzehSusan Margulies
Published in: Biomedical engineering education (2022)
This paper provides a synopsis of discussions related to the Learning Environments track of the Fourth BME Education Summit held at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio in May 2019. This summit was organized by the Council of Chairs of Bioengineering and Biomedical Engineering, and participants included over 300 faculty members from 100+ accredited undergraduate programs. The Learning Environments track had six interactive workshops that provided facilitated discussion and provide recommendations in the areas of: (1) Authentic project/problem identification in clinical, industrial, and global settings, (2) Experiential problem/project-based learning within courses, (3) Experiential learning in co-curricular learning settings, (4) Team-based learning, (5) Teaching to reach a diverse classroom, and (6) innovative platforms and pedagogy. A summary of the findings, best practices and recommendations from each of the workshops is provided under separate headings below, and a list of resources is provided at the end of this paper.
Keyphrases
  • quality improvement
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • wastewater treatment