McKelvey School of Engineering launches Division of Engineering Education

New division will focus on world-class education for students, tools for faculty

Beth Miller  
Undergraduate-level class in mechanical engineering (2019)
Undergraduate-level class in mechanical engineering (2019)

McKelvey School of Engineering has launched a new Division of Engineering Education to facilitate a world-class, well-rounded engineering education for students that stems from excellence in instruction and the art and science of teaching.

Jay Turner has been appointed head of the division by Dean Aaron F. Bobick, dean and the James M. McKelvey Professor. Turner also is vice dean for education, the James McKelvey Professor of Engineering Education and professor of energy, environmental & chemical engineering.

“The creation of this new division is an exciting development for McKelvey’s educational enterprise,” said Jennifer R. Smith, vice provost for educational initiatives and professor of earth and planetary sciences. “Its efforts in developing transformative, cross-cutting experiences for students and in supporting department- and school-wide efforts to create and promote evidence-based pedagogies will help place McKelvey at the forefront of educational innovation.”

“This new division was designed to support both our school’s departments and instructors and serve as a test bed to develop and adopt innovative approaches to engineering education,” Bobick said. “It also will facilitate and coordinate interdisciplinary and collaborative projects among multiple departments.”

“The Division of Education will be a key resource for experiential learning and career-development programming within McKelvey and foster multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary design-, problem- and project-based opportunities for students,” Turner said.

The Division of Engineering Education will focus on curriculum that is not specific to any engineering domain with such courses as Engineering Ethics and Sustainability; Amplifying CyberDiversity: Real Humans in Virtual Spaces; Technical Writing; Leadership and Team Building; Conflict Management and Negotiation; among others. In addition, it will focus on the 14 Grand Challenges for Engineering put forth by the National Academy of Engineering, which include advancing personalized learning, securing cyberspace, and engineering the tools of the scientific discipline.

Teaching fellows who will focus on specific areas of education will join the division. The first teaching fellow will focus on machine learning as it applies to mechanical engineering. In addition, the division will house a new STEM faculty onboarding program, led by Jason Crandall, director of Learning Design & Innovation, and Meghann Pytka, instructional specialist, that will help McKelvey Engineering faculty who have teaching responsibilities understand the expectations, standards and resources used in STEM courses while providing the tools and techniques needed for high-quality instruction.

Overall, the division will serve as an umbrella organization for a variety of existing offices and academic programs in the school, including the Engineering Communications Center and Instructional Design and Technology.


The McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis promotes independent inquiry and education with an emphasis on scientific excellence, innovation and collaboration without boundaries. McKelvey Engineering has top-ranked research and graduate programs across departments, particularly in biomedical engineering, environmental engineering and computing, and has one of the most selective undergraduate programs in the country. With 165 full-time faculty, 1,420 undergraduate students, 1,614 graduate students and 21,000 living alumni, we are working to solve some of society’s greatest challenges; to prepare students to become leaders and innovate throughout their careers; and to be a catalyst of economic development for the St. Louis region and beyond.

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