Table of Contents

What is The Gateway Coalition?

The "Gateway" Engineering Education Coalition - Phase II is a collaborative program of 7 institutions, supported by the Engineering Directorate of the National Science Foundation. Headquartered at Drexel University and representing a diversity of institutional cultures imbedded in regions of significantly underrepresented minority populations, the Coalition expects to open new "gateways" for learning by altering engineering education from a focus on course content to a focus on the development of human resources and the broader experience in which individual curriculum parts are connected and integrated.

The intellectual threads weave together the introduction of engineering and its functional core "up-front", unified and connected supportive knowledge "concurrently", the integrative aspects of the engineering process, multidisciplinary emphasis, and instructional technologies. To the greatest extent possible these are achieved through cross-institutional programs which lead to lowering barriers among institutions as well as within institutions.

The Role of The Gateway Coalition
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The Focus Areas of The Gateway Coalition - Phase II

The scope of the program includes six major foci. These focus areas are:

Assessment
Instructional Technologies
Professional Development
Underrepresented Populations
Curriculum Development & Implementation
Linking & Sharing

The Emerging Engineering Professional

Educating the emerging engineering professional is a broadly-defined mission whose sphere of influence extends beyond the technical and scientific aspects, whether they be foundational underpinnings or the upper division specializations. The engineering professional must also develop:

  • The ability to effectively communicate in written and oral forms;
  • A sense of business acumen, practices, and awareness -- this includes some understanding of marketing, economics, and organizational management; their interplay among themselves and with the engineering process;
  • An understanding for, and work ethic for leadership in the workplace; individual and team contributions, sensitivity to customer needs, their incorporation into the engineering and engineering management process, and commitment to the concepts of total quality management;
  • A sense of professional ethical and legal responsibilities;
  • An appreciation of the joy of learning and of the need for lifelong learning;
  • An appreciation for intellectual breadth to be not only an engineering leader but a well versed and updated participant in societal activities. To reach this requires an appreciation for the humanities, arts, politics, law and business beyond that which is technically or scientifically targeted.

The interplay of the four major foci is a beginning through which to address this technical and non-technical breadth.

Delivering an educational experience that incorporates these objectives and tools requires a change in the pedagogical culture from a program that is lecture driven and teacher centered to one that is process driven and student centered. Inherent in this educational process is to better understand how we learn as well as how we teach. In the longer term these collective efforts push the envelope of the institutional culture to alter and enhance the manner in which it initiates and embraces systematic institutional change.

For more detailed information on the Gateway Coalition's mission, read the Gateway Strategic Plan.

Gateway Organization and Personnel

Search the full Gateway membership database; or browse by organizational groups:


Other Items of Interest

The Gateway Coalition honored by
The Innovation Network:

Novell, Inc., Computerworld &
The Smithsonian Institution


Visit Related Web Site

Gateway Newsletter

Gateway Publications

Gateway Member Institutions

Gateway Conferencing Services NEW!

Shared Resource Modules for
Environmental Engineering Education
NEW!

Secured Administrative Module


Copyright © 1999 by the Gateway Coalition.
Questions or comments? Contact [email protected]
Last modified: Oct 22, 2002.