WinterLab Developing a Low-Cost, Portable Experiment Platform to Encourage Engagement in the Electronics Lab

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Maclean Rouble
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7615-6894
Matt Dobbs
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7166-6422
Adam Gilbert

Abstract

Encouraging student engagement is a key aim in any educational setting, and allowing students the freedom to pursue their own methods of solving problems through independent experimentation has been shown to markedly improve this. In many contexts, however, allowing students this flexibility in their learning is hampered by constraints of the material itself, such as in the electronics laboratory, where expensive and bulky equipment confines the learning environment to the laboratory room. Finding ourselves in the position of teaching one such laboratory course at the undergraduate level, we sought to encourage students to learn through independent investigation and the pursuit of personal projects, by providing a more flexible and inquiry-based learning environment and allowing them to take their measurement equipment—and their learning—beyond the laboratory itself. We present this project as a case of design both for and by students, with the lead designer undertaking the project after attending the course in question, and pursuing its development as a foundational step in their graduate career. We discuss the challenges and opportunities we encountered over the course of the design and development process, and the eventual key output of the project: a portable, low-cost, integrated electronics experimentation platform called the WinterLab board.

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How to Cite
Rouble, M., Dobbs, M., & Gilbert, A. (2023). WinterLab: Developing a Low-Cost, Portable Experiment Platform to Encourage Engagement in the Electronics Lab. International Journal of Designs for Learning, 14(1), 11–22. https://doi.org/10.14434/ijdl.v14i1.33406
Section
Design Cases
Author Biographies

Maclean Rouble, McGill University

Maclean Rouble is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Physics at McGill University. Her research focuses on the development of instrumentation and electronic readout architectures for millimeter-wavelength telescopes.

Matt Dobbs, McGill University

Matt Dobbs is a Canada Research Chair in the Department of Physics, an associate member of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at McGill University, and a senior fellow in the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research Gravity & the Extreme Universe program.

Adam Gilbert, McGill University

Adam Gilbert (at the time of the development of this project) was an academic associate working as an electrical engineer in the Department of Physics at McGill University. He now works at Nüvü Caméras Inc.