Preparing Students for Drone Careers Using Active Learning Instruction
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2021
Abstract
The exponential growth in the adoption of drones in various industrial applications has created a demand for professionals experienced in designing, programming, operating, and piloting drones. This paper reports on an active learning-based instructional approach that prepares students for careers in the drone industry. The approach focuses on three foundational pillars of drone careers: 1) drone programming using Python, 2) designing and fabricating drones using Computer-Aided Design (CAD) and rapid prototyping, and 3) the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Part 107 Commercial small Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (sUAVs) pilot test. The approach was implemented and refined over four semesters in an undergraduate class attended by engineering and computer science students at a research institution located in the United States. A case study approach using multiple assessment methods was implemented to examine students' gains in skills and knowledge and attitudes towards an active learning-based approach for drone education. Assessment methods included direct formative (FAA quizzes and programming assignments), direct summative (capstone project), indirect quantitative (survey of learning gains), and indirect qualitative (focus group interviews and capstone project process videos) tools. Assessment results noted in this paper indicate that students were actively engaged during the course and made positive gains in their learning outcomes.
Identifier
85114708100 (Scopus)
Publication Title
IEEE Access
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3110578
e-ISSN
21693536
First Page
126216
Last Page
126230
Volume
9
Recommended Citation
Lobo, Deepan; Patel, Drashti; Morainvile, Jorim; Shekhar, Prateek; and Abichandani, Pramod, "Preparing Students for Drone Careers Using Active Learning Instruction" (2021). Faculty Publications. 4486.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/4486