The Curio Cabinet

Season 3 Curio #4: The Engineering Pipeline

8 min · 9 jul 2026
aflevering Season 3 Curio #4: The Engineering Pipeline artwork

Beschrijving

Summary — The Engineering Pipeline In One line: Engineering education takes two distinct paths; early specialization vs. broad foundation first, and both are navigating the same tension between depth and adaptability. Artifact: Engineering Education Models (European depth-first vs. North American broad-then-deep; Waterloo's co-op model) Pattern: Programs historically ran theory before practice; increasingly, design-based learning is introduced earlier. Identifying that context makes concepts stick, and cycling between learning and application deepens both. Paradox: The deeper engineering expertise becomes, the more interdisciplinary collaboration it requires. Exploring how depth and breadth aren't competing, they're interdependent. Signal: Interdisciplinary STEM is rising. Engineers are being asked to think across data science, policy, sustainability, and systems design, not just within a single domain. Education technology evolves quickly. But the patterns of learning change slowly. That’s why we keep the cabinet open. Thanks for exploring The EdTech Curio Cabinet. Do you have thoughts regarding this Curio you would like to share? Send us an email to curiosteward@gmail.com [curiosteward@gmail.com] You can find us on: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/ [https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/] TikTok - curiosteward (@curiosteward) | TikTok LinkedIn - Curio Steward | LinkedIn

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aflevering Season 3 Curio #4: The Engineering Pipeline artwork

Season 3 Curio #4: The Engineering Pipeline

Summary — The Engineering Pipeline In One line: Engineering education takes two distinct paths; early specialization vs. broad foundation first, and both are navigating the same tension between depth and adaptability. Artifact: Engineering Education Models (European depth-first vs. North American broad-then-deep; Waterloo's co-op model) Pattern: Programs historically ran theory before practice; increasingly, design-based learning is introduced earlier. Identifying that context makes concepts stick, and cycling between learning and application deepens both. Paradox: The deeper engineering expertise becomes, the more interdisciplinary collaboration it requires. Exploring how depth and breadth aren't competing, they're interdependent. Signal: Interdisciplinary STEM is rising. Engineers are being asked to think across data science, policy, sustainability, and systems design, not just within a single domain. Education technology evolves quickly. But the patterns of learning change slowly. That’s why we keep the cabinet open. Thanks for exploring The EdTech Curio Cabinet. Do you have thoughts regarding this Curio you would like to share? Send us an email to curiosteward@gmail.com [curiosteward@gmail.com] You can find us on: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/ [https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/] TikTok - curiosteward (@curiosteward) | TikTok LinkedIn - Curio Steward | LinkedIn

9 jul 20268 min
aflevering Season 3 Curio #3: The Nordic Experiment artwork

Season 3 Curio #3: The Nordic Experiment

Summary — The Nordic Experiment In one line : Experiences in Finland prove you can have strong learning outcomes with almost no standardized testing, if you invest deeply in teachers and then trust them. Artifact: Nordic Education Models (Finland's trust-based accountability; Pasi Sahlberg's Finnish Lessons) Pattern: Education systems historically oscillate between centralized control and professional autonomy. Nordic systems lean hard toward autonomy, treating teachers like doctors: trained rigorously, then trusted to exercise judgment. Paradox: Less testing doesn't mean less accountability, it means accountability is relocated from the exam to the profession itself. Signal: The future may require holding two things at once: the comparability that standardization offers, and the nuance that professional judgment provides. This signals that trust and rigor aren't opposites. Education technology evolves quickly. But the patterns of learning change slowly. That’s why we keep the cabinet open. Thanks for exploring The EdTech Curio Cabinet. Do you have thoughts regarding this Curio you would like to share? Send us an email to curiosteward@gmail.com [curiosteward@gmail.com] You can find us on: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/ [https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/] TikTok - curiosteward (@curiosteward) | TikTok LinkedIn - Curio Steward | LinkedIn

6 jul 20268 min
aflevering Season 3 Curio #2: The Examination Culture artwork

Season 3 Curio #2: The Examination Culture

The Examination Culture - Examinations and Meritocracy Summary — The Examination Culture In one line : High-stakes national exams like China's Gaokao quietly narrow what education is for. Artifact: National Examination Systems (Gaokao; historical roots in China's Imperial Examination) Pattern: Exams evolved as meritocratic tools; a way to allocate opportunity by ability rather than birth, creating a shared, trusted signal of competence. Paradox: The fairness of a single exam breeds an education system optimized to pass that exam, making it very good at known questions and less good at generating new ones. Signal: Alternative models (coursework, project-based, digital assessment) are supplementing not replacing traditional exams, shifting the question from what students know, to how they think. Education technology evolves quickly.  But the patterns of learning change slowly.  That’s why we keep the cabinet open.  Thanks for exploring The EdTech Curio Cabinet.  Do you have thoughts regarding this Curio you would like to share?  Send us an email to curiosteward@gmail.com You can find us on: Youtube - The Curio Cabinet@CurioSteward link - https://youtu.be/_1al89NNIU4 Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/ TikTok - curiosteward (@curiosteward) | TikTok LinkedIn - Curio Steward | LinkedIn #exampreparation #examculture #examstrategy #examtips #gaokao

2 jul 20267 min
aflevering Season 3 Curio #1: Why Some Countries Excel at Math artwork

Season 3 Curio #1: Why Some Countries Excel at Math

Season 3 : In one line : After two seasons examining teaching practices and technology, Season 3 steps back to ask the bigger question; How do the education systems themselves shape the way people learn STEM, and what can global comparisons reveal about where learning is headed? Curio — Why Some Countries Excel at Math In one line : Top-performing math nations succeed not through a single secret, but through culture, sequencing, and treating mistakes as the beginning of learning.   Artifact: Global Mathematics Performance (PISA rankings; Singapore Math model) Pattern: Cultural expectations that frame math as learnable through effort, not innate talent. In these models, struggle is normalized, not avoided. Paradox: Systems that look rigid from the outside (structured, disciplined) actually enable creativity. Identifying how deep mastery opens flexibility rather than constraining it. Signal: Ideas are crossing borders fast, but replication isn't the point. Understanding why a system works matters more than copying what it does.  Education technology evolves quickly.  But the patterns of learning change slowly.  That’s why we keep the cabinet open.  Thanks for exploring The EdTech Curio Cabinet.  Do you have thoughts regarding this Curio you would like to share?  Send us an email to curiosteward@gmail.com You can find us on: Youtube: The Curio Cabinet@CurioSteward  Link: https://youtu.be/ddqsuMi6H3U Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/curiosteward/ TikTok - curiosteward (@curiosteward) | TikTok LinkedIn - Curio Steward | LinkedIn #edtechsystems #edtechintegration #edtechtips

29 jun 202612 min
aflevering Curio Cabinet Season Two Complete - All Curios artwork

Curio Cabinet Season Two Complete - All Curios

Thank you for exploring the Cabinet with us. Season Two References: Statement on Academic Integrity and Artificial Intelligence - ICAI (June 2023) UNESCO's AI Competency Frameworks for Students and Teachers (2024–2025): https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000386693 [https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000386693] Brown, P. C., Roediger III, H. L., & McDaniel, M. A. (2014). Make It Stick: The Science of Successful Learning. Harvard University Press. Make It Stick Overview Hattie, J. (2008). Visible Learning: A Synthesis of Over 800 Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement. Routledge. Visible Learning Overview Bloom, B. S. (1984). “The 2 Sigma Problem: The Search for Methods of Group Instruction as Effective as One-to-One Tutoring.” Educational Researcher, 13(6), 4–16. Bloom’s 2 Sigma Problem Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press. Wonderful summary by S.McLeod: https://www.simplypsychology.org/zone-of-proximal-development.html [https://www.simplypsychology.org/zone-of-proximal-development.html] Zakaria, F. (2015). In defense of a liberal education. Simon & Schuster Audio. https://www.amazon.ca/Defense-Liberal-Education-Fareed-Zakaria/dp/1442389761 [https://www.amazon.ca/Defense-Liberal-Education-Fareed-Zakaria/dp/1442389761] Woolf, B. P. (1992). AI in Education. In S. C. Shapiro (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Artificial Intelligence (2nd ed., pp. 434–444). John Wiley & Sons. https://web.cs.umass.edu/publication/docs/1991/UM-CS-1991-037.pdf [https://web.cs.umass.edu/publication/docs/1991/UM-CS-1991-037.pdf] Luckin, R. (2019). “Is Education Ready for Artificial Intelligence?” Cambridge Assessment. Presented at the Cambridge Summit of Education. Is Education Ready for Artificial Intelligence? (cambridgeassessment.org.uk [http://cambridgeassessment.org.uk/]) Shulman, L. S. (1986). Those who understand: Knowledge growth in teaching. Educational Researcher, 15(2), 4–14. https://www.wcu.edu/webfiles/pdfs/shulman.pdf [https://www.wcu.edu/webfiles/pdfs/shulman.pdf]   Education technology evolves quickly. But the patterns of learning change slowly. That’s why we keep the cabinet open. Thanks for exploring The EdTech Curio Cabinet.   Do you have thoughts regarding this Curio you would like to share? Send us an email to curiosteward@gmail.com [curiosteward@gmail.com]

27 jun 202658 min