EWB Challenge
The pioneering design program teaching primary-year engineering students to design creative solutions to real world problems Get InvolvedDownload FlyerReal design challenges developed with real communities. Develop the professional and practical design skills of students with this first step into professional engineering practice. Using comprehensive design briefs researched and prepared by EWB Australia and our network of community partners, students develop engineering solutions for real communities living in the countries within which we work.
Each year, the EWB Challenge as part of the EWB Challenge Series, presents a new design brief for first-year students to problem-solve.
We partner with grassroots community development organisations in the Asia Pacific and co-design a real-life challenge that has been identified by the community. Each brief is meticulously researched on location, with extensive documentation, interviews,and multi-media assets provided to students to ensure a rich, deep insight into the life and challenges of that community.
Learn more about the program requirements for universities and students to participate.
Students work in teams and are given a term to develop their solution. Since the establishment of the EWB Challenge in 2007, students have worked on designs to solutions from renewable energy to food processing, and for communities in Zambia, Vietnam, India, Timor Leste, Cambodia and Vanuatu
The resulting student designs are reviewed by EWB, industry partners, academics and representatives from the community partner organisation. Importantly, all ideas are shared back to the community partner, enabling the potential for future development.
“The EWB Challenge really throws you in the deep end and gets you to consider all aspects of the project. You have got to engage with the client and consider the user experience,…not everyone lives the way I do or thinks the way I do. “
The Benefits
- Ready made platform supporting practical learning outcomes for students
- Low risk first step into real engineering practice
- Fosters human-centered design approaches
- Connection to like-minded peers and a network of leading community and industry organisations
- Contributes to real outcomes and purposeful research
Students
University
“A big part of the EWB Challenge program is that it teaches students empathy. Engineers are all about solving people’s problems. How can I solve your problem if I can’t empathise with that problem?”
The Showcase
The EWB Challenge Showcase is the annual capstone event of the EWB Challenge. The very best student design teams come together to compete for a selection of awards, adjudicated by an expert panel of community and industry partners. Students also have the opportunity to network and learn more about human-centered engineering approaches through supplementary workshops and presentations.
“I really liked having a real village in Vanuatu to work with, and knowing that I was designing for real people.”
Our Community Partners
The EWB Challenge provides EWB Australia’s community-based partners and programs with a valuable pathway for connecting with the global engineering and design sector.
EWB Australia works collaboratively with our community-based partner to identify projects for the design briefs that suit student engagement and support. Connecting with universities through a platform like the EWB Challenge is an opportunity for programs and community partners to source innovative, creative ideas and research for a broad range of projects of interest to them.
At the completion of each semester, ideas generated through student projects are workshopped with EWB Australia and partner staff and volunteers, to investigate how appropriate and inspiring outputs might be integrated into current or future areas of work.
Dawul Wuru Aboriginal Corporation
Community Partner for the 2022 EWB Challenge
Dawul Wuru Aboriginal Corporation (Dawul Wuru) is an Aboriginal Traditional Owner owned, managed and governed community organisation that exists to ‘protect, secure, support and promote the rights and interests of local Aboriginal Traditional owners and custodians’.
2022 EWB Challenge project briefs support Yirrganydji people to sustain wellbeing, culture and care for their rainforest and coastal land and sea Country between Cairns and Port Douglas, in Far North Queensland in Australia, for the benefit of current and future generations.
The 2022 EWB Challenge is sponsored by RS Group.
Centre for Appropriate Technology (CfAT)
Community Partner for the 2020 EWB Challenge
The Centre for Appropriate Technology (CfAT) is an Aboriginal and Torres-Strait Islander controlled not-for-profit organisation which ‘exists to support people in regional and remote Australia in the choices they make in order to maintain their relationship with country.
2020 EWB Challenge project briefs explored appropriate technology which supports traditional owners living and thriving on homelands and outstations, with a focus on CfAT’s work with communities in the Cape York region of Far North Queensland.
We are delighted to be delivering the 2022 EWB Challenge in partnership with First Nations community organisation, Dawul Wuru Aboriginal Corporation (Dawul Wuru).
This is the third year in a row that the EWB Challenge will be delivered in partnership with a First Nations community organisation, building on EWB Australia’s commitment to supporting First Nations people to pursue their aspirations and to live safely and productively on Country.
Interested in our later year offerings?
Learn more about our Research Challenge, a program within the EWB Challenge Series for later-year undergraduate and postgraduate students of any discipline.
EWB Challenge Stories
Contact Us
Please get in touch if you’d like a copy of the current program outline.