WAVE Magazine 2019 - 2020 | Page 19

D I G I TA L DESIGN STUDIO FINANCIAL MARKETING “That’s the power of creativity-infused STEM education — turning students into active learners, as opposed to those students who are programed to mimic what we’re teaching them, and then when the course is over, flush their memory.” DR. leaders as they connected the dots between classroom knowledge and real-world applications in project- based lessons. Dr. Tiryakioglu noticed his students retained the classroom lessons better, and even learned more advanced concepts at earlier stages. When students working on a project encountered a problem or an obstacle that was beyond their current ability, they had to learn a more advanced method in order to overcome that hurdle and keep the project moving forward — “just-in-time learning.” There were other benefits Dr. Tiryakioglu didn’t anticipate when he embarked on this educational experiment years ago. His students learned how to work in teams; how to ask better questions; how to communicate with each other; and how to build M U R AT T I R YA K I O G L U on ideas in ways that strengthened the overall results. Many people call these “soft skills.” Dr. Tiryakioglu prefers the term “professional skills,” because every professional working in a STEM field should have them. But these skills are not typically taught in STEM programs. “Traditional engineering programs are viewed as two years of the ‘death march,’ which is all science and F E AT U R E S 19