Abstract:
South Africa’s economic, political and social challenges are complex, systemic and pervasive. Failing to
address these decisively, innovatively and efficiently will significantly and negatively impact the
country’s long-term economic sustainability. This study integrated Purpose-driven pedagogy into the
engineering curricula through an engineering with a purpose challenge as an intervention method to train
students to reflect, ideate, and prototype technology solutions. However, what defines these solutions is
that they are framed within a purpose-driven philosophy and epistemology. Twelve 12 students competed
in the challenge. However, only 2 completed the challenge. An exit survey found that the students
struggled with time management but felt they had learned project management and advanced problemsolving skills to equip them for their future engineering careers. Notably, both finalists were women and
academically ‘at-risk’. This demonstrates the potential for the Engineering with a Purpose Challenge to
attract more women to study engineering and address academic quality concerns within the engineering
curricula
Description:
Journal article published in African Perspectives of Research in Teaching and Learning Journal Volume 10, Issue 1, 2026