$2.5 million eCAMINOS program focuses on student strengths
The University of Arizona has established the eCAMINOS program to help students identify with engineering and recognize what they bring to the table.
Funded with nearly $2.5 million from the National Science Foundation, eCAMINOS began in fall 2024 at the Tucson and Yuma campuses. The program's name ("camino" means "path" in Spanish) represents engineering pathways, and its intention is to shift education away from addressing students' knowledge deficiencies and toward valuing strengths and experience.
Asset-based rather than deficit-based thinking has been shown to be effective in promoting student success, said project lead Vignesh Subbian, associate professor of BME and systems and industrial engineering and member of the university's BIO5 Institute.
"But little is known about how to do it longitudinally, throughout the student's engineering program. This project helps us do that," Subbian said.
Subbian added that eCAMINOS helps the college better serve Arizona and promotes access to high-quality engineering education.