Since the entrance of the graduates of technical high schools to engineering programs is hindered, in application, the graduates of general or science high schools only are accepted to engineering education. For these students, four years are not sufficient to teach the basic and the related application courses of the profession. Looking at the existing curriculum of mechanical engineering, it can be seen that in the 1st Year, the physics and chemistry courses repeat the content of the ones given in high school education. The current approach considers the students as they come to university with inadequate and incomplete knowledge and therefore not ready to follow the engineering science courses. This approach underestimates and denies the high school education contrary to the main objective of its curriculum. The main objective of high schools (secondary schools) is expressed in the Laws and Regulations with such a statement: “General high schools do not prepare students for a specific profession but rather for higher education”. Today, the existing curriculum of Mechanical Engineering is to be renewed by some new science and application courses to satisfy the demands of labor market. However, the total course credit limit prevents such a renewal. In the face of this dilemma, the answer to this question becomes important: Should the university really repeat high school physics and chemistry? In science high schools and in science branch of general high schools the science and mathematics courses have the major importance. The students are well educated on physics, chemistry, biology and mathematics. They are provided with the necessary science and mathematics background that is required in engineering education. Although only the well-educated graduates of science and general high schools are admitted to engineering programs and the students are already ready to follow the engineering science courses thanks to their high school background, unfortunately in some universities (in Turkey in all) science courses part of engineering curricula is filled by physics and chemistry courses with the same content of the ones taught in high school.
Skip Nav Destination
ASME 2014 12th Biennial Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis
July 25–27, 2014
Copenhagen, Denmark
Conference Sponsors:
- International
ISBN:
978-0-7918-4583-7
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Shall We Continue Keeping High School Courses in Mechanical Engineering Curriculum?
Murat Sönmez
Murat Sönmez
Middle East Technical University NCC, Mersin, Turkey
Search for other works by this author on:
Murat Sönmez
Middle East Technical University NCC, Mersin, Turkey
Paper No:
ESDA2014-20103, V001T08A002; 6 pages
Published Online:
October 23, 2014
Citation
Sönmez, M. "Shall We Continue Keeping High School Courses in Mechanical Engineering Curriculum?." Proceedings of the ASME 2014 12th Biennial Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis. Volume 1: Applied Mechanics; Automotive Systems; Biomedical Biotechnology Engineering; Computational Mechanics; Design; Digital Manufacturing; Education; Marine and Aerospace Applications. Copenhagen, Denmark. July 25–27, 2014. V001T08A002. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/ESDA2014-20103
Download citation file:
13
Views
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Articles
Articulating a Learning Objective
J. Mech. Des (July,2007)
Inaugural Editorial
ASME Open J. Engineering (January,2022)
Crossing the Lines
Mechanical Engineering (September,2004)
Related Chapters
Discussion
Modified Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (mDFA)
The future state of content & competency-based engineering education: Lean Engineering Education
Lean Engineering Education: Driving Content and Competency Mastery
International PM Perspective
International Project Management for Technical Professionals