TY - JOUR
T1 - Taking the Challenge
T2 - An Exploratory Study of the Challenge-Based Learning Context in Higher Education Institutions across Three Different Continents
AU - van den Beemt, Antoine A.J.
AU - Vázquez-Villegas, Patricia
AU - Gómez Puente, Sonia M.
AU - O'Riordan, Fiona
AU - Gormley, Clare
AU - Chiang, Feng-Kuang
AU - Leng, Chuntao
AU - Caratozzolo, Patricia
AU - Zavala, Genaro
AU - Membrillo-Hernandez, Jorge
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Teaching by subjects and contents where students passively receive knowledge is increasingly obsolete. Universities are opting for teaching strategies supporting skills development to face the labor, social, environmental, and economic conditions afflicting us. Employers demand increasingly complex skills; universities have identified experiential learning as giving access to real situations and learning by doing. One of the most advanced strategies is Challenge-Based Learning (CBL). Through real problem situations, faculty and students collaborate to solve an established challenge, with or without external stakeholders. This educational advancement has been global and is developing graduates with international skills, which ensures a world-class standard. Here we report a global study carried out in universities from three different continents, and we analyze the implementations of CBL in educational programs through cases in Mexico, The Netherlands, Ireland, and China. Developing skills and competencies is evident, and CBL is a viable way to ensure the success of Higher Education graduates. Obstacles in the transformation of faculty towards CBL are a similar fence in all cases. For CBL, the path needs to be explored, as it is on the frontline of educational developments that can be most helpful for developing a new paradigm in education.
AB - Teaching by subjects and contents where students passively receive knowledge is increasingly obsolete. Universities are opting for teaching strategies supporting skills development to face the labor, social, environmental, and economic conditions afflicting us. Employers demand increasingly complex skills; universities have identified experiential learning as giving access to real situations and learning by doing. One of the most advanced strategies is Challenge-Based Learning (CBL). Through real problem situations, faculty and students collaborate to solve an established challenge, with or without external stakeholders. This educational advancement has been global and is developing graduates with international skills, which ensures a world-class standard. Here we report a global study carried out in universities from three different continents, and we analyze the implementations of CBL in educational programs through cases in Mexico, The Netherlands, Ireland, and China. Developing skills and competencies is evident, and CBL is a viable way to ensure the success of Higher Education graduates. Obstacles in the transformation of faculty towards CBL are a similar fence in all cases. For CBL, the path needs to be explored, as it is on the frontline of educational developments that can be most helpful for developing a new paradigm in education.
KW - STEM
KW - curriculum
KW - educational innovation
KW - flexibility
KW - higher education
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85151090713&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/educsci13030234
DO - 10.3390/educsci13030234
M3 - Article
SN - 2227-7102
VL - 13
JO - Education Sciences
JF - Education Sciences
IS - 3
M1 - 234
ER -