Organizational leadership and effective team problem solving strategies in engineering design projects: A case study

Abstract

This project presents a case study examination of the problem solving strategies and discourse patterns used by members of an Engineering Capstone Design Team. In our study, a multi- disciplinary team of engineering educators from two institutions worked together to collect data and analyze results over the course of the Spring 2008 semester. The findings in this study represent the perceptions of team members documented through multiple measurement instruments including surveys, personal e-mail exchanges, written responses, and both personal and videotaped interviews throughout the design process. The perceptual data presents examples of effective and ineffective team problem solving communication strategies applied to an Engineering Capstone Design project. Collectively, we believe these findings document the opportunities found in integrating theories of Organizational Leadership into engineering education as potential problem solving benchmarks and assessment of communication in our engineering design student teams. Successful communication is facilitated by having clearly understood objectives, clearly identified individual roles, and a specified system of communication. Another critical aspect of all three of the aforementioned characteristics is the alignment of each team member's perception of the three characteristics; a concept found in Organizational Behavior theory. Another key point is that student perceptions and the requirements for the characteristics above change as the project matures. The study concludes with the finding that students' perceptions regarding the level of communication and work distribution in a group are integral to group alignment and agreement. Several recommendations are given that instructors can implement to facilitate accurate perceptions. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2009.

Publication Title

ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS