Course + Curriculum
The course, Engineering for US All (e4usa), empowers, engages, and excites students to use what they know and find what they are passionate about to take control and boldly influence the world.

Connect with Engineering
Students will connect with engineering by learning the “why” and “how” of engineering; exploring engineering as a noun and a verb, and building confidence in their understanding of engineering concepts. e4usa is an onramp for students to learn about engineering as a profession and a personal practice and increases student confidence to use engineering tools and thinking. Students will practice three systematic continuous improvement practices: consistent critical self-reflection, ethical action, and seeking feedback (e.g. performance data, mentoring, etc.). In the course, students will examine historical and current engineers and trace their professional origins to create their own understanding of the value of diversity in engineering, as well as build their own identity as a confident problem solver.
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Engage like Engineers
This course will explore the interplay among society’s need for engineering, the intentions of engineers, and the positive and negative impacts of engineering. In multidisciplinary teams and individually, students will explore and embody various expert roles including both humanities and STEM-field experts as they grapple with humanity’s grand challenges. Students will grow an appreciation for how shifting scales (e.g. local, regional, global) change the potential impact on society with attention paid to ethical implications.
Unit Guides
Design Portfolio
Engineering design as a process, or design within constraint, is scaffolded in terms of a learning progression that can be practiced in any discipline. Students who complete this course will have had opportunities to create and iterate in at least 4 ways to contribute to their design portfolio.
- Teacher-led design experiences (e.g. Water Filter, Shoe Tread, Robot Mover, etc.)
- Self-directed ‘local product’ launch and a high school design-a-thon.
- A solution to a global problem that is applicable in the students’ local context.
- A personal project or a solution addressing the needs of a classmate or external client.

Engineering Design Practices
Design is the cornerstone of engineering, and students will explore engineering design as a means to solve real-world problems. Students will develop personal problem-solving agency by practicing a systematized method of engineering design that builds autonomy and mastery. Students will troubleshoot and optimize in contexts of increasing ambiguity and complexity. Students will practice negotiating tradeoffs in design and valuing the input of multiple disciplinary expertise. Communication of results will occur in a school-wide ‘innovation showcase’ and in documentation through a digital design portfolio shared with the entire e4usa community.
ITEEA ALIGNMENT NGSS ALIGNMENTThe e4usa curriculum consists of 8 units taught over the course of four nine-week quarters. Each unit covers our four signature course threads to help students achieve the following learning outcomes.
Red Thread: Discover Engineering
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Yellow Thread: Engineering in Society
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Blue Thread: Engineering Professional Skills
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Green Thread: Engineering Design
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Introducing Engineering
Unit 1 - Engineering is… Everywhere
Students will explore engineering through the evolution of engineering products. They will define engineering by relating it to their future plans and engaging in two one-day challenges. Students will begin to build their engineering identity.
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Unit 2 - Engineering is… Creative
Students move from "group work" to "teamwork". the students then engage in a guided engineering challenge(s) tethered to a global issue in which they are provided a related problem and design, and then construct and test and evaluate product(s) to address a need. this challenge is water filtration.
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Applying Engineering: Generating a solution to a local problem
Unit 3 - Engineering is… Human-Centered
Teams of 3-4 students will select a local problem to research, sketch, and then prototype a solution. This will be an in-depth investigation into “What is the real problem” as well as stakeholder analysis. The goal is to understand the real problem, creatively construct a low-cost functional prototype and compare to existing solutions not necessarily refine, iterate, or ‘deliver.’
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Engineering is... Responsive
Prototypes will be presented at an in-school design-a-thon and to community partners for critical feedback and user input. Design details will be documented in students' engineering design process portfolios.
From here, teachers can choose to proceed through Units 5-7, or choose to follow a path of either Unit 5 & 6, or Unit 7, depending on the comfort level of the teacher to allow more freedom in student-led teams and time available. All teachers will complete Unit 8.
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Applying Engineering: Generating a solution to a global issue
Unit 5 - Engineering is… Intentional
Teams of 3-4 students will identify a global issue and will identify a local problem that is associated with the global issue identified. The issues and problems selected will be co-constructed by students and teachers and framed with the task of trying to change the world for less than $1,000. Student teams will present a design brief to external evaluators in which they will justify their conceptual design concepts and project management plan for the chosen problem.
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Unit 6 - Engineering is... Iterative
Team of 3-6 students will engage in all aspects of the design process. Students will build, test, and optimize a prototype of the solution designed. As time permits, students will re-design a solution based on what they learned from the testing of their first prototype to refine what they learned through iteration. Student teams will generate a comprehensive engineering design report and will provide a design presentation.
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Generating an engineering solution to a problem relevant to you
Unit 7 - Engineering is… Personal
Students examine their day-to-day lives to find problems that can be tackled by teams of 3-4 students. Students may also solve a problem provided by a local community partner that is of personal interest to them. The process leading to a design solution is student-driven, teacher-guided, and highly informed by the prior experiences in the course. This is open ended co-creation.
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Unit 8 - Engineering is... Reflective
Students will reflect on both their engineering design process decisions and work as well as their teamwork in their final project. Students will also take part in a public showcase of their work.
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