Initial Validation of a Technical Writing Rubric for Engineering Design

Engineering design serves as the capstone experience of most undergraduate engineering programs. One of the key elements of the engineering design process is the compilation of results obtained into a technical report that can be shared and distributed to interested stakeholders including industry,...

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Main Authors: Cheryl Bodnar, Jennifer Kadlowec
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Association of Online Engineering (IAOE) 2018-02-01
Series:International Journal of Engineering Pedagogy (iJEP)
Subjects:
Online Access:http://online-journals.org/index.php/i-jep/article/view/7728
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spelling doaj-43009914efe74c59a4d156a47bb7261b2021-09-02T03:16:28ZengInternational Association of Online Engineering (IAOE)International Journal of Engineering Pedagogy (iJEP)2192-48802018-02-0181819110.3991/ijep.v8i1.77283565Initial Validation of a Technical Writing Rubric for Engineering DesignCheryl Bodnar0Jennifer Kadlowec1Rowan University 201 Mullica Hill Road Glassboro, NJ USA 08028Rowan University 201 Mullica Hill Road Glassboro, NJ USA 08028Engineering design serves as the capstone experience of most undergraduate engineering programs. One of the key elements of the engineering design process is the compilation of results obtained into a technical report that can be shared and distributed to interested stakeholders including industry, faculty members and other relevant parties. In an effort to expand the tools available for assessment of engineering design technical reports, this study performed an initial validation of a previously developed Technical Writing rubric. The rubric was evaluated for its reliability to measure the intended construct, inter-rater reliability and external validity in comparison to an existing generalized written communication rubric. It was found that the rubric was reliable with Cronbach’s alpha for all dimensions between 0.817 and 0.976. The inter-rater reliability for the overall instrument was also found to be excellent at 0.85. Finally, it was observed that there were no statistically significant differences observed between the measurements obtained on the Technical Writing rubric in comparison to the more generalized Written Communication Value rubric. This demonstrates that although specific to engineering design environments the Technical Writing rubric was able to measure key constructs associated with written communication practice. This rubric can now serve as one additional tool for assessment of communication skills within engineering capstone design experiences.http://online-journals.org/index.php/i-jep/article/view/7728desighwritten communicationrubricvalidation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cheryl Bodnar
Jennifer Kadlowec
spellingShingle Cheryl Bodnar
Jennifer Kadlowec
Initial Validation of a Technical Writing Rubric for Engineering Design
International Journal of Engineering Pedagogy (iJEP)
desigh
written communication
rubric
validation
author_facet Cheryl Bodnar
Jennifer Kadlowec
author_sort Cheryl Bodnar
title Initial Validation of a Technical Writing Rubric for Engineering Design
title_short Initial Validation of a Technical Writing Rubric for Engineering Design
title_full Initial Validation of a Technical Writing Rubric for Engineering Design
title_fullStr Initial Validation of a Technical Writing Rubric for Engineering Design
title_full_unstemmed Initial Validation of a Technical Writing Rubric for Engineering Design
title_sort initial validation of a technical writing rubric for engineering design
publisher International Association of Online Engineering (IAOE)
series International Journal of Engineering Pedagogy (iJEP)
issn 2192-4880
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Engineering design serves as the capstone experience of most undergraduate engineering programs. One of the key elements of the engineering design process is the compilation of results obtained into a technical report that can be shared and distributed to interested stakeholders including industry, faculty members and other relevant parties. In an effort to expand the tools available for assessment of engineering design technical reports, this study performed an initial validation of a previously developed Technical Writing rubric. The rubric was evaluated for its reliability to measure the intended construct, inter-rater reliability and external validity in comparison to an existing generalized written communication rubric. It was found that the rubric was reliable with Cronbach’s alpha for all dimensions between 0.817 and 0.976. The inter-rater reliability for the overall instrument was also found to be excellent at 0.85. Finally, it was observed that there were no statistically significant differences observed between the measurements obtained on the Technical Writing rubric in comparison to the more generalized Written Communication Value rubric. This demonstrates that although specific to engineering design environments the Technical Writing rubric was able to measure key constructs associated with written communication practice. This rubric can now serve as one additional tool for assessment of communication skills within engineering capstone design experiences.
topic desigh
written communication
rubric
validation
url http://online-journals.org/index.php/i-jep/article/view/7728
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