Presentation
Engineering together sustainable communities: sustainability engineering in action
Fecha
2016-06-26Autor
Azuz-Adeath, Isaac
Institución
Resumen
In the summer of 2015, a group of students and faculty from the University of Texas at El Paso
and Carnegie Mellon University travelled to the city of Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico, to
join a group of students and faculty from CETYS Universidad, a local prominent university in
Mexico. The objective of the combined group was to learn about Sustainability Engineering and
apply this knowledge to local community based projects. This paper is a recount of the
experiences from this faculty-led study abroad exchange program funded by the 100,000 Strong
in the Americas initiative. Furthermore, we present the lessons drawn from this experience with
the hope that these help others with similar efforts. Some of these lessons include: key issues in
planning effective community based projects, student teams’ early work prior to travelling,
connecting classroom theory to the local community, training students to consider non-technical
issues in the community, importance of student full immersion in the community, understanding
the local idiosyncrasies and policymaking, and making students aware of their power and
responsibilities as engineers, among others. The bi-national, multidisciplinary student teams
tackled a variety of real community-based challenges, ranging from energy and water
conservation for processes at local wineries, to socio-cultural issues of the indigenous Kumiai
tribe. This study abroad program provided a unique opportunity to engage in real, hands-on
projects with local communities to design and implement sustainable engineering solutions; the
objective of this transformative educational experience is to solve real problems, and in the
process, train responsible leaders that are true agents of change. Preparing a program like this
requires various steps in anticipation, sometimes with years in advance, for example: cultivating
the relationships with the international counterparts, procuring funding to support the activities,
establishing agreements with departments and colleges for course credit recognition, resolving
institutional and federal travel risk issues, recruitment and selection of students, travel and
housing logistics, local contacts involved in community projects, and follow up of the projects
after program completion.