Cultivating the Assimilative Perspective in Contextual Engineering – Knowing What You Don’t Know

Contextual Engineering methodology affords engineering practitioners a more robust process for identifying socioeconomic and cultural conditions within a client community that could affect adoption and sustainability of a technical infrastructure. This methodology seeks to build an assimilative vie...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ann-Perry Witmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Engineers Without Borders Australia 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of Humanitarian Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jhe.ewb.org.au/index.php/jhe/article/view/173
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spelling doaj-5c8207c50db045aab22e490773a2d7a82021-02-02T12:49:46ZengEngineers Without Borders AustraliaJournal of Humanitarian Engineering2200-49042020-10-018110.36479/jhe.v8i1.173Cultivating the Assimilative Perspective in Contextual Engineering – Knowing What You Don’t KnowAnn-Perry Witmer0University of Illinois Contextual Engineering methodology affords engineering practitioners a more robust process for identifying socioeconomic and cultural conditions within a client community that could affect adoption and sustainability of a technical infrastructure. This methodology seeks to build an assimilative view of the client through direct interactions, which enable practitioners to assess critical local conditions without filtering their understanding through the lens of their own experiences. Some practitioners assert that direct interaction with a client community is unnecessary to achieve an assimilative view, particularly in an era when information is widely available via the internet, and communication with remote partners is possible using a variety of technologies. But assessments of the perceptions of engineering practitioners engaged in two separate projects in Latin America before and after travel to the client communities demonstrate that their understanding of community conditions were altered dramatically once they interacted with residents and experienced site conditions first hand. https://jhe.ewb.org.au/index.php/jhe/article/view/173Humanitarian engineering, Contextual Engineering, international development, perceptions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ann-Perry Witmer
spellingShingle Ann-Perry Witmer
Cultivating the Assimilative Perspective in Contextual Engineering – Knowing What You Don’t Know
Journal of Humanitarian Engineering
Humanitarian engineering, Contextual Engineering, international development, perceptions
author_facet Ann-Perry Witmer
author_sort Ann-Perry Witmer
title Cultivating the Assimilative Perspective in Contextual Engineering – Knowing What You Don’t Know
title_short Cultivating the Assimilative Perspective in Contextual Engineering – Knowing What You Don’t Know
title_full Cultivating the Assimilative Perspective in Contextual Engineering – Knowing What You Don’t Know
title_fullStr Cultivating the Assimilative Perspective in Contextual Engineering – Knowing What You Don’t Know
title_full_unstemmed Cultivating the Assimilative Perspective in Contextual Engineering – Knowing What You Don’t Know
title_sort cultivating the assimilative perspective in contextual engineering – knowing what you don’t know
publisher Engineers Without Borders Australia
series Journal of Humanitarian Engineering
issn 2200-4904
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Contextual Engineering methodology affords engineering practitioners a more robust process for identifying socioeconomic and cultural conditions within a client community that could affect adoption and sustainability of a technical infrastructure. This methodology seeks to build an assimilative view of the client through direct interactions, which enable practitioners to assess critical local conditions without filtering their understanding through the lens of their own experiences. Some practitioners assert that direct interaction with a client community is unnecessary to achieve an assimilative view, particularly in an era when information is widely available via the internet, and communication with remote partners is possible using a variety of technologies. But assessments of the perceptions of engineering practitioners engaged in two separate projects in Latin America before and after travel to the client communities demonstrate that their understanding of community conditions were altered dramatically once they interacted with residents and experienced site conditions first hand.
topic Humanitarian engineering, Contextual Engineering, international development, perceptions
url https://jhe.ewb.org.au/index.php/jhe/article/view/173
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