‘Shaping Tomorrow Together’ is a year-long, 15-ECTS-credit module delivered to over 400 yr1 UG students across 13 STEM disciplines and two global campuses, UK and UAE. The module foregrounds the Climate Emergency as a frame through which emerging specialists view their subsequent learning. The course delivers social, technical and political content around Climate Change as an engaging, discursive vehicle for building students’ key academic study skills and encouraging personal and collegiate growth. Multidisciplinary collaborative activity develops the core social and teamworking skills required to address ‘wicked problems’ (Rittel & Webber, 1973). It is unusual find a mandatory, multidisciplinary, credit-bearing module in Climate Literacy and advocacy in accredited STEM tertiary education. The authors propose that this innovation is analogous to the traditional Art School ‘foundation year’ experience, where personal growth, positioning and core skill development is facilitated via a broad pedagogic framework for exploration and experimentation. This approach can in turn be compared with recent innovations in widening access to HE and STEM subjects via foundational education provision as a gateway to accredited degree study. The paper presents an analysis of literature exploring the origins of the ‘foundation year’ in Arts Education and reviews this against three years’ delivery of this course to STEM students. Student feedback and reflections from past cohorts evidence the personal and academic development of students across the course. The paper concludes by positing the efficacy of this method in developing critically-evaluative, resilient and engaged students with a clear sense of purpose in tackling the Climate Emergency.
Alex is an RIBA/RIAS Chartered Architect and fellow of the RSA and the HEA. She is Strategic Projects Lead for L&T at Heriot Watt University, Edinburgh.
Alex is devoted to education that inspires learners, confronting the challenges of the Climate Emergency. She is pioneering programmes for higher education syllabi, working between construction subjects and with professionals outside HE. She believes that smart education and training, honing trans-disciplinary communication and social skills, will deliver the technical evolution of the construction industry, and inspire future generations.
Linsey is an Associate Professor at Heriot Watt University Dubai campus. Coming from a background of Environmental Design from Duncan of Jordanstone in Dundee, she now researches and teaches across the construction industry spectrum, specialising in collaboration and multidisciplinary teamwork. She is the Academic Lead for Student Engagement at the Centre of Excellence in Smart Construction, and engages passionately inside and outside the higher education sector, to promote pioneering education in construction at all levels.