Tag Archives: Reimagine STEM

Mod#4-post5: “Reimagine STEM” Podcast Episodes

Reimagine STEM is a four episodes podcast series discussing inter-disciplinary education and practice in engineering and computer science. It was created by a group of creative producers at the CoDesign Culture Lab, an event hosted by the ANU College of Engineering and Computer Science (CECS) in November 2019 as part of the CECS agenda to Reimagine how engineering and computer science serve the emerging needs of the middle of the next century. The episodes focus on four main themes:

  • Educational innovation
  • Computer science and engineering for social benefit
  • The need for diversity
  • Indigenous knowledge contributions

As I listened to the podcast episodes, particularly, episodes three and four, I realized more than ever the need to work collaboratively with Indigenous communities to widen our toolbox and integrate new knowledge as well as our need to develop with an eye on their local concerns. Below is the list of episodes and few notes on each. On the same page, you will find other podcasts interviewing each guest; some discuss work on the ground relevant to our coursework.

Episodes Key Highlights
Episode [01]: Engineering education for the future

-“Equity is we want to make sure that all different student populations are welcome, rigour as we want to teach something that has real content, scale is we want to make sure that we remove impediments that make us work at very large scales. “- Shriram Krishnamurthi

  • Discusses how to support the next generation of engineers and computer scientists and help them shape a better future.
  • Recommends educational approaches such as developing micro-credentials and using role playing games to tackle ethical issues in technology solutions.
Episode [02]: Engineering for social benefit

-“We don’t want to approach problems as engineering problems. We need to approach them as human problems.”  Cameron Tonkinwise-

  • Highlights that social benefit is at the heart of engineering and computer science.
  • Emphasizes the importance of understanding context, community needs, and actively consult and take a local direction in development processes.
Episode [03]: From diversity STEMs brilliance

-“There is a wealth of lived experiences and creativity that is either not invited in [the] fold in the first place or get squeezed out of the fold.” Cathy Ayres-

  • Explores the systemic barriers and stereotypes that stop minority groups including indigenous communities in computer science & engineering fields and how inclusion is key to creating a future we all want to live in.
Episode [04]: First Nations, first knowledge

– We need to start working together, in that two-way learning where Indigenous knowledges and knowledge systems and Western ways of engineering and computer science is an incredibly valuable collaboration.” Angie Abdilla-

  • Discusses how an effective, a holistic view, can cover a whole lifecycle of an intervention.
  • Provides a deep dive into Indigenous Knowledges and frameworks
  • Sheds the light on how society should learn to acknowledge and connect with some of the world earliest innovators, the Australian Indigenous people, to approach contemporary problems.

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