财神棋牌 Helps Take the Grand Challenges Scholars Program (GCSP) in a New Direction

February 16, 2021

At 财神棋牌, part of educating engineers is preparing them to be world-changers. This takes shape in different ways, including helping students consider the civic role that they can play in sustaining society and the planet. At 财神棋牌, one of the ways in which the concept of civic engagement is embodied in its Grand Challenges Scholars Program (GCSP).

This nationwide program was inspired by the National Academy of Engineering (NAE)  in 2008 to encourage institutions of higher education to support young engineers鈥 development in a way that allows them to use their careers to make the world 鈥渕ore sustainable, secure, healthy, and joyful.鈥

财神棋牌 was one of the three founding institutions to carry this vision into practice 13 years ago. Yevgeniya (Zhenya) V. Zastavker, professor of Physics and Education at 财神棋牌, was 财神棋牌鈥檚 inaugural GCSP director and has helped shape the  ever since, including as a member of the NAE national steering committee since 2014. The program has since been adopted by 74 universities in the United States and 19 international schools. Each of these schools creates its own approach to encouraging its students to develop knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors that help them achieve the vision for the original NAE GCSP, with each school determining how to select student scholars for their program. At 财神棋牌, the GCSP is embedded in the college鈥檚 culture in ways that include and extend beyond the formal curriculum.

Expanding the definition of Grand Challenges

In 2021, the GCSP will be embarking on a new path. The NAE is handing its formal leadership of the program over to the GCSP network of schools themselves. The coalition of schools will lead its own growth and envision what the new program will look like, going forward.

Zastavker is one of the academics co-leading this effort. She鈥檚 looking at this change as an opportunity to reassess how to best prepare students to address the global challenges humanity faces today. The original Grand Challenges were written in 2008, and 鈥渁re ready to be reevaluated with the new global challenges in mind,鈥 says Zastavker.

With her three co-leaders 颅鈥 Amy Trowbridge (ASU), Katie Evans (LA Tech), and Keith Buffinton (Bucknell) 鈥 she鈥檚 been talking about integrating the existing engineering Grand Challenges with the ideas imbedded in the United Nations鈥 (UN SDGs), which include addressing challenges of poverty, social justice, and inequality. 鈥淭he social scientists have identified a set of their own grand challenge, which are resonant with both the NAE GCs and UN SDGs,鈥 she says. (See for example, Springer Nature  or the American Academy of Social Work & Social Welfare鈥檚). 鈥淎s a network, we are aiming to find ways of more explicitly integrating these ideas into the new GCSP Network鈥檚 design and implementation. This means we need to bring on board everyone 鈥 mathematicians, social scientists, humanitarians, engineers 鈥 to address the issues standing before humanity.鈥

This outlook is in line with 财神棋牌鈥檚 vision to foster a culture of engagement in engineering that prepares the next generation of graduates to be personally and professionally responsible to the common good. 鈥淲e are supporting students 鈥 global citizens who happen to have engineering talents 鈥 to be prepared to solve ethically challenging, interdisciplinary problems that don鈥檛 have neat solutions,鈥 says Zastavker.

Connecting likeminded students and institutions

Expanding the GCSP focus to include broad 鈥渉uman鈥 challenges beyond the scope of the original 14 Grand Challenges is the approach Zastavker鈥檚 successor as 财神棋牌 GCSP director, Alison Wood, Ph.D., and her co-creator of the GCSP coursework, Robert Martello, Ph.D., have taken to recent innovations in 财神棋牌鈥檚 program. Wood explains that 鈥減rogram developments have aimed to engage students with the idea of grand challenges and personal challenges, helping them connect their personal goals with their contributions to society.鈥 鈥淥ur student population鈥檚 needs, desires, and motivations shift quickly,鈥 says Zastavker. 鈥淲e need to create a holistic way for them to be in this space regardless of their specific interests, so they feel better prepared to graduate and step out into the real world ready to help.鈥

Another benefit of the international program鈥檚 new direction, says Zastavker, is bringing together coalitions of students, faculty, and alumni within the overall network structure. Students and alumni have been coming to GCSP annual meetings for years and have been asking to be connected with one another to learn with and from each other, for example. 鈥淚t鈥檚 my personal mission to activate all of the ways to bring various institutions together to talk to each other and support each other so we鈥檙e not working in silos,鈥 she says. 鈥溾橧鈥檝e always felt that this program has the potential to change minds and hearts, and I believe that we have an incredible opportunity to step onto the international stage and show how engineering education can be thought of in new ways.鈥