Airbus and the Global Engineering Deans Council
(GEDC) have selected three finalists for the 7th annual Airbus
GEDC Diversity Award.
Launched by Airbus in 2012, the long-term goal of
the award is to increase diversity amongst engineering
professionals globally.
An Award Committee of Airbus employees and GEDC
members reviewed 48 entries from 18 countries and five continents,
the highest number of entries in the history of the award.
Fourteen projects were selected for the shortlist, but the three finalist projects which were chosen for
their innovative nature and results to date are:
Cross-campus capstone classroom (C4) from York
University - Lassonde School of Engineering in Canada
The cross-campus capstone classroom unites
engineering, dance and other faculty members to break down
disciplinary barriers between students and work together to solve
problems that require more than one disciplinary lens. In its
first year, 74 students from 23 programmes and 8 faculties,
including 23 engineering students, are involved. Teams research
and design a sustainable solution to one of 11 social impact
challenges set by companies, non-profits, start-ups, and
government-linked organisations. This full-year capstone
experience helps students recognise the value of their own
disciplinary skills, learn how to work effectively across
boundaries and understand that today's problems require us to
learn with each other and work together for a common purpose.
Embracing Diversity MOOC from METID Politecnico di
Milano in Italy
The “Embracing Diversity” MOOC (Massive Open Online
Course) helps students to understand the effects of discouragement
and self-exclusion on female talent - with big repercussions in
the world of work - and shares actions useful to motivate more
girls to study STEM. It also reports, as best practices, the cases
of organisations that promote inclusion to create a fertile,
authentic work environment. The MOOC is hosted on Polimi Open
Knowledge Platform, available for free to everyone. 2,000+ users
have participated, with 900+ obtaining the certificate of
attendance (over 60% completion).
NUSTEM: Broadening Aspirations to STEM careers in
North East England from Northumbria University In the United
Kingdom
In the UK, under 20% of engineering and technology
undergraduates are female. The UK also has the lowest proportion
of female engineers in Europe. The North East underperforms this
national picture. Established in 2014, NUSTEM represents a radical
rethink of university outreach. The initiative, built on robust
research, provides sustained, collaborative, inclusive and
career-informed interventions with young people from early years
onwards, and with their influencers - their families and teachers.
These interventions include careers-inspired curriculum-focussed
workshops and simple, accessible tools such as ‘STEM Person of the
Week’. NUSTEM now has long-term collaborations with 48 schools in
areas of deprivation and has worked with 43,795 children and
enabled a further 14,119 interactions with their families and
teachers.
A representative from each project will present
their initiative to a distinguished Jury at Airbus Headquarters in
Toulouse, France, later this year where the winning project will
also be announced.
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