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Sanjivani Rural Education Society’s
Sanjivani College of Engineering, Kopargaon-423 603
(An Autonomous Institute, Affiliated to Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune)
NAAC ‘A’ Grade Accredited, ISO 9001:2015 Certified
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. Laxmikant S. Dhamande
Associate Professor
E-mail : dhamandelaxmikantmech@sanjivani.org.in
Contact No: 9404319427
OUTCOME BASED EDUCATION
What do Engineers do?
Engineers architect/plan, design, develop, manufacture, test, install,
operate, and maintain technological products and systems.
Engineers provide services using technological products.
Groups of engineers and non-engineers solve socially relevant
complex technical problems.
Engineers are required to operate and behave as per well-defined
professional and ethical standards.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Good Engineer
Characteristics of a good engineer considered important by the
industries:
• Have sound knowledge of engineering sciences and technologies.
• Ability to solve well defined and ill-defined problems.
• Have awareness of customers‟ needs and market trends.
• Have an interest and awareness in all facets of engineering activities.
• Ability to work in a team.
• Ability to document, plan and communicate effectively.
• Willingness and ability to learn on the job.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Engineering Education
Find answers to two far-reaching questions:
• What knowledge, skills, attitudes and values will today’s students
(you) need to shape and thrive your world in future?
• How can instructional systems develop these knowledge, skills,
attitudes and values effectively?
Knowledge and Skills
• Disciplinary knowledge will be important, as the raw material from
which new knowledge is developed, together with the capacity to think
across the boundaries of disciplines and “connect the dots”.
• Epistemic knowledge, or knowledge about the disciplines, such as
knowing how to think like a mathematician, historian or scientist, will
also be significant, enabling students to extend their disciplinary
knowledge.
• Procedural knowledge is acquired by understanding how something is
done or made – the series of steps or actions taken to accomplish a goal.
Knowledge and Skills
• Students need to apply their knowledge in unknown and evolving
circumstances.
• For this, you will need a broad range of skills, including,
• cognitive and meta-cognitive skills (e.g. critical thinking, creative
thinking, learning to learn and self-regulation);
• social and emotional skills (e.g. empathy, self-efficacy and
collaboration); and
• practical and physical skills (e.g. using new information and
communication technology devices).
Blooms’ Taxonomy
• Three Domains of Educational Activities:
• Cognitive Domain (Knowledge and Reasoning)
• knowledge, comprehension, and critical thinking
• Knowing
• Affective Domain (Values and Attitudes)
• The way people react emotionally
• Feeling
• Psychomotor Domain (Skills)
• Ability to physically manipulate a tool or instrument
• Doing
7
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Blooms’ Taxonomy- Cognitive Domain
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Blooms’ Taxonomy- Affective Domain
Receiving
(Ask, accept, hold)
A student saw a person helping poor
Responding
(Answer, assist,
discuss)
Student saw people appreciating the
person who helped poor
Valuing (Embrace,
follow, join, share,
value)
Student gives a value that helping poor
is an appreciable work
Organizing
(Alter, combine,
complete, integrate,
order, organize,
relate, synthesize)
He then organizes the learning for how
to help the poor
Charaterizing
(qualify, resolve,
solve, verify)
At this stage the habit becomes part of
his character
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Blooms’ Taxonomy- Affective Domain
Bloom’s Taxonomy - Psychomotor Domain
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Attitudes and Values
• The use of this broader range of knowledge and skills will be mediated by
attitudes and values (e.g. motivation, trust, respect for diversity and
virtue).
• The attitudes and values can be observed at personal, local, societal and
global levels.
• The concept of competency implies more than just the acquisition of
knowledge and skills; it involves the mobilisation of knowledge, skills,
attitudes and values to meet complex demands
Developing Competency
• The ability to develop competencies is itself something to be learned using a
sequenced process of,
• reflection,
• anticipation and
• action.
• Reflective practice is the ability to take a critical stance when deciding, choosing and
acting, by stepping back from what is known or assumed and looking at a situation
from other, different perspectives.
• Anticipation mobilizes cognitive skills, such as analytical or critical thinking, to
foresee what may be needed in the future or how actions taken today might have
consequences for the future.
• Both reflection and anticipation are forerunners to responsible actions.
Outcome Based Education
• Outcome: Competency, Standard, Benchmark, Attainment target
• Outcome Based Education is an approach to education in which
decisions about the curriculum, instruction and assessment are
driven by the exit learning outcomes that the students should
demonstrate at the end of a program or a course.
• In outcome-based education, “product defines process”.
• It is the opposite of input-based education where the emphasis
is on the teaching and the system is happy to accept whatever is
the result.
Advantages of OBE (Outcome Based Education)
• Clarity: An explicit statement, of what the educational process aims to
achieve, clarifies the curriculum for both students and teachers, and
provides a focus for teaching and learning.
• Provision of a Framework: Outcome-based education provides a robust
framework for integration of the curriculum.
• Involvement
• Guide for Assessment: The outcomes provide the framework for student
examinations.
• Facilitates Curriculum Evaluation: The outcomes provide benchmarks
against which the curriculum can be judged.
Outcome Based Education
• As per OBE „Students Learn Well‟ when
• They are clear about what they should be able to do at the end of a course
• Assessment is in alignment with what they are expected to do
• Instructional activities are designed and conducted to facilitate them to
acquire what they are expected to achieve
• Levels of Outcomes
• Program Educational Objectives
• Program Outcomes and Program Specific Outcomes
• Course Outcomes
NBA
• Engineering Programs in India
• Are offered as per the regulations of All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE)
• Are offered by Tier 1 (Academically Autonomous) and Tier 2 (Academically Non-
autonomous) Institutions.
• NBA Established in the year 1994 under Section 10 (u) of AICTE Act.
• The NBA became Autonomous in January 2010.
• The Memorandum of Association and Rules of the NBA were amended in April 2013 to
make it administratively as well as financially independent of AICTE.
• India became a permanent member of the Washington Accord in 2014.
• The NBA, since 2015, requires that engineering programs are conducted in the
framework of Outcome Based Education.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
NBA
Washington Accord
• It recognizes the substantial equivalence of programs accredited by signatory countries.
• It recommends that graduates of programs accredited by any of the signatory bodies be
recognized by the other bodies as having met the academic requirements for entry to the
practice of engineering Accreditation
• Accreditation is a process of quality assurance and improvement, whereby a program in an
approved Institution is critically appraised to verify that the Institution or the program
continues to meet and/or exceed the Norms and Standards prescribed by the regulator from
time to time.
• It is a kind of recognition which indicates that a program or Institution fulfills certain
standards.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
NBA
• The National Board of Accreditation (NBA)
• It requires, since 2015, all engineering programs attain the Program
Outcomes, and demonstrate continuous improvement in their performance.
• Most Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) in engineering want their programs
to be accredited by the NBA.
• National Education Policy (NEP) 2019 requires that programs and institutions
should be accredited by 2022.
• All teaching and learning activities in HEIs should be planned and conducted
to facilitate the students to attain well defined and measurable Outcomes
(OBE).
• Accreditation and Outcome Based Education (OBE) became the foci of higher
education in India since 2015.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Engineering Education
Engineering Education
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
The OBE Framework
Outcome Based Education
(Learning &
Teaching)
(Curriculum)
(Education)
(Assessment)
Assessment
• Assessment is an integral part of teaching and learning, helping to provide a picture of a learner‟s
progress and achievements and to identify next steps in learning
• Direct methods display the student’s knowledge and skills from their performance in the
continuous assessment tests, end-semester examinations, presentations, and classroom
assignments etc.
• Direct Assessment Method: using measurable performance indicators of students
• CATs, Exams, Assignments, Projects, Tutorials, Labs, Presentations
• Indirect methods such as surveys and interviews ask the stakeholders to reflect on student‟s learning.
• Indirect Assessment Method: Ascertaining opinion or self reports
• Rubrics, Alumni survey, Employer survey, Course-end survey, etc.,.
25
Vision
To develop world class professionals through quality
education.
Mission
• To create academic excellence in the field of Engineering and
Management through education, training and research to
improve quality of life of people
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L. S.
Dhamande
Vision and Mission of Institute
Vision
To develop world class, multidimensional, competent, disciplined and
ethical Mechanical engineers for the society.
Mission
• To impart quality education to the students through class-room
teaching, innovative projects, and industry-institution interaction
• To provide a better environment to encourage and support
participation in co-curricular and extra-curricular activities
• To use technology of Mechanical Engineering as a prime tool for the
multifaceted development of our students in the emerging fields of
Engineering.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L. S.
Dhamande
Vision and Mission of Department
Program Educational Objectives (PEOs) of Mechanical Engineering
• PEO1: To develop graduates with a sound technical knowledge for a
successful career in industries, higher studies and to demonstrate
entrepreneurship.
• PEO2: To prepare graduates with expertise in use of modeling,
analysis and programming software.
• PEO3: To inculcate interpersonal skills with ethical approach and
contribute towards social, personal, economical and environmental
issues.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L. S.
Dhamande
The OBE Framework
POs
PO1
PO2
PO3
PO4
PO5
PO6
PO7
PO8
PO9
PO10
PO11
PO12
Programme Outcomes are a set of
narrow statements that describes
what students (learners) of the
programme are expected to know
and be able to perform or attain by
the time of graduation.
Programme Outcomes
• PO1:Engineering knowledge: Apply the knowledge of mathematics, science,
engineering fundamentals, and an engineering specialization to the solution of
complex engineering problems.
• PO2: Problem analysis: Identify, formulate, review research literature, and
analyze complex engineering problems reaching substantiated conclusions using
first principles of mathematics, natural sciences, and engineering sciences.
• PO3: Design/development of solutions: Design solutions for complex
engineering problems and design system components or processes that meet the
specified needs with appropriate consideration for the public health and safety, and
the cultural, societal, and environmental considerations.
• PO4: Conduct investigations of complex problems: Use research-based
knowledge and research methods including design of experiments, analysis and
interpretation of data, and synthesis of the information to provide valid
conclusions.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Programme Outcomes
• PO5: Modern tool usage: Create, select, and apply appropriate techniques,
resources, and modern engineering and IT tools including prediction and modeling
to complex engineering activities with an understanding of the limitations.
• PO6: The engineer and society: Apply reasoning informed by the contextual
knowledge to assess societal, health, safety, legal and cultural issues and the
consequent responsibilities relevant to the professional engineering practice.
• PO7: Environment and sustainability: Understand the impact of the
professional engineering solutions in societal and environmental contexts, and
demonstrate the knowledge of, and need for sustainable development.
• PO8: Ethics: Apply ethical principles and commit to professional ethics and
responsibilities and norms of the engineering practice.
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Programme Outcomes
• PO9: Individual and team work: Function effectively as an individual, and as a
member or leader in diverse teams, and in multidisciplinary settings.
• PO10: Communication: Communicate effectively on complex engineering
activities with the engineering community and with society at large, such as, being
able to comprehend and write effective reports and design documentation, make
effective presentations, and give and receive clear instructions.
• PO11: Project management and finance: Demonstrate knowledge and
understanding of the engineering and management principles and apply these to
one‟s own work, as a member and leader in a team, to manage projects and in
multidisciplinary environments.
• PO12: Life-long learning: Recognize the need for, and have the preparation and
ability to engage in independent and life-long learning in the broadest context of
technological change
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande
Program Specific Outcomes (PSOs) of Mechanical Engineering
At the end of the program graduates will demonstrate ability to
PSO1. Design and manufacture mechanical components and systems.
(Based on current/future industry requirement)
PSO2. Model and analyze machine components using modeling and
analysis software.
(PSO based on human resources)
PSO3. Specify, analyze and determine the performance of thermal
systems including IC engines, refrigeration and air conditioning
systems, air compressors, hydraulic turbines and pumps.
(PSO based on physical resources)
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L. S.
Dhamande
THANK YOU
Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon
Dr. L.S.Dhamande

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What is Outcome Based Education.pdf

  • 1. Sanjivani Rural Education Society’s Sanjivani College of Engineering, Kopargaon-423 603 (An Autonomous Institute, Affiliated to Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune) NAAC ‘A’ Grade Accredited, ISO 9001:2015 Certified Department of Mechanical Engineering Dr. Laxmikant S. Dhamande Associate Professor E-mail : dhamandelaxmikantmech@sanjivani.org.in Contact No: 9404319427 OUTCOME BASED EDUCATION
  • 2. What do Engineers do? Engineers architect/plan, design, develop, manufacture, test, install, operate, and maintain technological products and systems. Engineers provide services using technological products. Groups of engineers and non-engineers solve socially relevant complex technical problems. Engineers are required to operate and behave as per well-defined professional and ethical standards. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 3. Good Engineer Characteristics of a good engineer considered important by the industries: • Have sound knowledge of engineering sciences and technologies. • Ability to solve well defined and ill-defined problems. • Have awareness of customers‟ needs and market trends. • Have an interest and awareness in all facets of engineering activities. • Ability to work in a team. • Ability to document, plan and communicate effectively. • Willingness and ability to learn on the job. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 4. Engineering Education Find answers to two far-reaching questions: • What knowledge, skills, attitudes and values will today’s students (you) need to shape and thrive your world in future? • How can instructional systems develop these knowledge, skills, attitudes and values effectively?
  • 5. Knowledge and Skills • Disciplinary knowledge will be important, as the raw material from which new knowledge is developed, together with the capacity to think across the boundaries of disciplines and “connect the dots”. • Epistemic knowledge, or knowledge about the disciplines, such as knowing how to think like a mathematician, historian or scientist, will also be significant, enabling students to extend their disciplinary knowledge. • Procedural knowledge is acquired by understanding how something is done or made – the series of steps or actions taken to accomplish a goal.
  • 6. Knowledge and Skills • Students need to apply their knowledge in unknown and evolving circumstances. • For this, you will need a broad range of skills, including, • cognitive and meta-cognitive skills (e.g. critical thinking, creative thinking, learning to learn and self-regulation); • social and emotional skills (e.g. empathy, self-efficacy and collaboration); and • practical and physical skills (e.g. using new information and communication technology devices).
  • 7. Blooms’ Taxonomy • Three Domains of Educational Activities: • Cognitive Domain (Knowledge and Reasoning) • knowledge, comprehension, and critical thinking • Knowing • Affective Domain (Values and Attitudes) • The way people react emotionally • Feeling • Psychomotor Domain (Skills) • Ability to physically manipulate a tool or instrument • Doing 7
  • 8. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande Blooms’ Taxonomy- Cognitive Domain
  • 9. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande Blooms’ Taxonomy- Affective Domain Receiving (Ask, accept, hold) A student saw a person helping poor Responding (Answer, assist, discuss) Student saw people appreciating the person who helped poor Valuing (Embrace, follow, join, share, value) Student gives a value that helping poor is an appreciable work Organizing (Alter, combine, complete, integrate, order, organize, relate, synthesize) He then organizes the learning for how to help the poor Charaterizing (qualify, resolve, solve, verify) At this stage the habit becomes part of his character
  • 10. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande Blooms’ Taxonomy- Affective Domain
  • 11. Bloom’s Taxonomy - Psychomotor Domain Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 12. Attitudes and Values • The use of this broader range of knowledge and skills will be mediated by attitudes and values (e.g. motivation, trust, respect for diversity and virtue). • The attitudes and values can be observed at personal, local, societal and global levels. • The concept of competency implies more than just the acquisition of knowledge and skills; it involves the mobilisation of knowledge, skills, attitudes and values to meet complex demands
  • 13. Developing Competency • The ability to develop competencies is itself something to be learned using a sequenced process of, • reflection, • anticipation and • action. • Reflective practice is the ability to take a critical stance when deciding, choosing and acting, by stepping back from what is known or assumed and looking at a situation from other, different perspectives. • Anticipation mobilizes cognitive skills, such as analytical or critical thinking, to foresee what may be needed in the future or how actions taken today might have consequences for the future. • Both reflection and anticipation are forerunners to responsible actions.
  • 14. Outcome Based Education • Outcome: Competency, Standard, Benchmark, Attainment target • Outcome Based Education is an approach to education in which decisions about the curriculum, instruction and assessment are driven by the exit learning outcomes that the students should demonstrate at the end of a program or a course. • In outcome-based education, “product defines process”. • It is the opposite of input-based education where the emphasis is on the teaching and the system is happy to accept whatever is the result.
  • 15. Advantages of OBE (Outcome Based Education) • Clarity: An explicit statement, of what the educational process aims to achieve, clarifies the curriculum for both students and teachers, and provides a focus for teaching and learning. • Provision of a Framework: Outcome-based education provides a robust framework for integration of the curriculum. • Involvement • Guide for Assessment: The outcomes provide the framework for student examinations. • Facilitates Curriculum Evaluation: The outcomes provide benchmarks against which the curriculum can be judged.
  • 16. Outcome Based Education • As per OBE „Students Learn Well‟ when • They are clear about what they should be able to do at the end of a course • Assessment is in alignment with what they are expected to do • Instructional activities are designed and conducted to facilitate them to acquire what they are expected to achieve • Levels of Outcomes • Program Educational Objectives • Program Outcomes and Program Specific Outcomes • Course Outcomes
  • 17. NBA • Engineering Programs in India • Are offered as per the regulations of All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) • Are offered by Tier 1 (Academically Autonomous) and Tier 2 (Academically Non- autonomous) Institutions. • NBA Established in the year 1994 under Section 10 (u) of AICTE Act. • The NBA became Autonomous in January 2010. • The Memorandum of Association and Rules of the NBA were amended in April 2013 to make it administratively as well as financially independent of AICTE. • India became a permanent member of the Washington Accord in 2014. • The NBA, since 2015, requires that engineering programs are conducted in the framework of Outcome Based Education. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 18. NBA Washington Accord • It recognizes the substantial equivalence of programs accredited by signatory countries. • It recommends that graduates of programs accredited by any of the signatory bodies be recognized by the other bodies as having met the academic requirements for entry to the practice of engineering Accreditation • Accreditation is a process of quality assurance and improvement, whereby a program in an approved Institution is critically appraised to verify that the Institution or the program continues to meet and/or exceed the Norms and Standards prescribed by the regulator from time to time. • It is a kind of recognition which indicates that a program or Institution fulfills certain standards. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 19. NBA • The National Board of Accreditation (NBA) • It requires, since 2015, all engineering programs attain the Program Outcomes, and demonstrate continuous improvement in their performance. • Most Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) in engineering want their programs to be accredited by the NBA. • National Education Policy (NEP) 2019 requires that programs and institutions should be accredited by 2022. • All teaching and learning activities in HEIs should be planned and conducted to facilitate the students to attain well defined and measurable Outcomes (OBE). • Accreditation and Outcome Based Education (OBE) became the foci of higher education in India since 2015. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 20. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande Engineering Education
  • 21. Engineering Education Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 22. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 24. Outcome Based Education (Learning & Teaching) (Curriculum) (Education) (Assessment)
  • 25. Assessment • Assessment is an integral part of teaching and learning, helping to provide a picture of a learner‟s progress and achievements and to identify next steps in learning • Direct methods display the student’s knowledge and skills from their performance in the continuous assessment tests, end-semester examinations, presentations, and classroom assignments etc. • Direct Assessment Method: using measurable performance indicators of students • CATs, Exams, Assignments, Projects, Tutorials, Labs, Presentations • Indirect methods such as surveys and interviews ask the stakeholders to reflect on student‟s learning. • Indirect Assessment Method: Ascertaining opinion or self reports • Rubrics, Alumni survey, Employer survey, Course-end survey, etc.,. 25
  • 26. Vision To develop world class professionals through quality education. Mission • To create academic excellence in the field of Engineering and Management through education, training and research to improve quality of life of people Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L. S. Dhamande Vision and Mission of Institute
  • 27. Vision To develop world class, multidimensional, competent, disciplined and ethical Mechanical engineers for the society. Mission • To impart quality education to the students through class-room teaching, innovative projects, and industry-institution interaction • To provide a better environment to encourage and support participation in co-curricular and extra-curricular activities • To use technology of Mechanical Engineering as a prime tool for the multifaceted development of our students in the emerging fields of Engineering. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L. S. Dhamande Vision and Mission of Department
  • 28. Program Educational Objectives (PEOs) of Mechanical Engineering • PEO1: To develop graduates with a sound technical knowledge for a successful career in industries, higher studies and to demonstrate entrepreneurship. • PEO2: To prepare graduates with expertise in use of modeling, analysis and programming software. • PEO3: To inculcate interpersonal skills with ethical approach and contribute towards social, personal, economical and environmental issues. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L. S. Dhamande
  • 29. The OBE Framework POs PO1 PO2 PO3 PO4 PO5 PO6 PO7 PO8 PO9 PO10 PO11 PO12 Programme Outcomes are a set of narrow statements that describes what students (learners) of the programme are expected to know and be able to perform or attain by the time of graduation.
  • 30. Programme Outcomes • PO1:Engineering knowledge: Apply the knowledge of mathematics, science, engineering fundamentals, and an engineering specialization to the solution of complex engineering problems. • PO2: Problem analysis: Identify, formulate, review research literature, and analyze complex engineering problems reaching substantiated conclusions using first principles of mathematics, natural sciences, and engineering sciences. • PO3: Design/development of solutions: Design solutions for complex engineering problems and design system components or processes that meet the specified needs with appropriate consideration for the public health and safety, and the cultural, societal, and environmental considerations. • PO4: Conduct investigations of complex problems: Use research-based knowledge and research methods including design of experiments, analysis and interpretation of data, and synthesis of the information to provide valid conclusions. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 31. Programme Outcomes • PO5: Modern tool usage: Create, select, and apply appropriate techniques, resources, and modern engineering and IT tools including prediction and modeling to complex engineering activities with an understanding of the limitations. • PO6: The engineer and society: Apply reasoning informed by the contextual knowledge to assess societal, health, safety, legal and cultural issues and the consequent responsibilities relevant to the professional engineering practice. • PO7: Environment and sustainability: Understand the impact of the professional engineering solutions in societal and environmental contexts, and demonstrate the knowledge of, and need for sustainable development. • PO8: Ethics: Apply ethical principles and commit to professional ethics and responsibilities and norms of the engineering practice. Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 32. Programme Outcomes • PO9: Individual and team work: Function effectively as an individual, and as a member or leader in diverse teams, and in multidisciplinary settings. • PO10: Communication: Communicate effectively on complex engineering activities with the engineering community and with society at large, such as, being able to comprehend and write effective reports and design documentation, make effective presentations, and give and receive clear instructions. • PO11: Project management and finance: Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the engineering and management principles and apply these to one‟s own work, as a member and leader in a team, to manage projects and in multidisciplinary environments. • PO12: Life-long learning: Recognize the need for, and have the preparation and ability to engage in independent and life-long learning in the broadest context of technological change Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande
  • 33. Program Specific Outcomes (PSOs) of Mechanical Engineering At the end of the program graduates will demonstrate ability to PSO1. Design and manufacture mechanical components and systems. (Based on current/future industry requirement) PSO2. Model and analyze machine components using modeling and analysis software. (PSO based on human resources) PSO3. Specify, analyze and determine the performance of thermal systems including IC engines, refrigeration and air conditioning systems, air compressors, hydraulic turbines and pumps. (PSO based on physical resources) Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L. S. Dhamande
  • 34. THANK YOU Department Of Mechanical Engineering, Sanjivani COE, Kopargaon Dr. L.S.Dhamande